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RESEARCH ARTICLE Open Access
A new mutant genetic resource for tomato cropimprovement by TILLING technologySilvia Minoia13 Angelo Petrozza1 Olimpia DrsquoOnofrio1 Florence Piron2 Giuseppina Mosca1 Giovanni Sozio1Francesco Cellini1 Abdelhafid Bendahmane2 Filomena Carriero1
Abstract
Background In the last decade the availability of gene sequences of many plant species including tomato hasencouraged the development of strategies that do not rely on genetic transformation techniques (GMOs) forimparting desired traits in crops One of these new emerging technology is TILLING (Targeting Induced LocalLesions In Genomes) a reverse genetics tool which is proving to be very valuable in creating new traits indifferent crop species
Results To apply TILLING to tomato a new mutant collection was generated in the genetic background of theprocessing tomato cultivar Red Setter by treating seeds with two different ethylemethane sulfonate doses (07and 1) An associated phenotype database LycoTILL was developed and a TILLING platform was also establishedThe interactive and evolving database is available online to the community for phenotypic alteration inquiries Tovalidate the Red Setter TILLING platform induced point mutations were searched in 7 tomato genes with themismatch-specific ENDO1 nuclease In total 95 kb of tomato genome were screened and 66 nucleotidesubstitutions were identified The overall mutation density was estimated and it resulted to be 1322 kb and1574 kb for the 1 EMS and 07 EMS treatment respectively
Conclusions The mutation density estimated in our collection and its comparison with other TILLING populationsdemonstrate that the Red Setter genetic resource is suitable for use in high-throughput mutation discovery TheRed Setter TILLING platform is open to the research community and is publicly available via web for requestingmutation screening services
BackgroundTomato (Solanum lycopersicum) is one of the mostimportant vegetable plants in the world Its fruits areend products both for the fresh market and food proces-sing industry Tomato presents a relatively small gen-ome highly syntenic to others economically importantSolanaceae species and was selected as a reference spe-cies for sequencing a Solanaceae genome In addition tothe availability of a number of genomic resourcesincluding transcriptome [1-3] and metabolome [4] largecollections of genetic resources are available to dissectthe biochemical and the metabolic pathways in tomato[5] Large EMS and fast neutron mutant collections inthe background of M82 tomato cultivar have been gen-erated and more then 3000 phenotype alterations
catalogued [6] An EMS-induced mutation library of theminiature dwarf tomato cultivar Micro-Tom has alsobeen produced and this constitutes another resource fortomato genetic studies [7]In recent years the genome sequencing program of
many plant species [8-10] including tomato [11] has ledto the availability of a large number of gene sequencesin public databases which subsequently has encouragedthe development of reverse genetics approaches T-DNAand transposon insertional mutagenesis have beenexploited to inactivate genes in tomato [1213] How-ever unless a high-throughput tomato transformationprotocol is developed systematic functional analysis oftomato genes with these approaches is not realistic Inrecent years TILLING (Targeting Induced Local LesionsIN Genomes) [1415] a new emerging technology thatdoesnrsquot rely on genetic transformation techniques allowssystematic functional genomic studies The only
Correspondence fcarrieroagrobiosit1Metapontum Agrobios SS Jonica 106 Km 4482 75010 Metaponto (MT)Italy
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
copy 2010 Carriero et al licensee BioMed Central Ltd This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative CommonsAttribution License (httpcreativecommonsorglicensesby20) which permits unrestricted use distribution and reproduction inany medium provided the original work is properly cited
prerequisite for its application is the knowledge of thegene nucleotide sequences TILLING is a reverse geneticstrategy that utilises chemical mutagenesis for inducingvariability and sensitive molecular screenings to identifypoint mutations responsible for phenotype alterationThe strength and potency of this reverse genetic strategyhas been validated by its successful application in bothplants (Arabidopsis thaliana [16-18] pea [19] wheat[20] rice [2122] barley [23] maize [24] soybean [25]Lotus japonicus [26] sorghum [27] tomato [2829]) andanimals (zebrafish [30] drosophila [31])In the present paper we report the construction of a
high-quality tomato genetic mutant reference collectionwhich could be used for both forward and reversegenetic studies We have developed such a populationby mutagenizing the processing tomato variety Red Set-ter with EMS and establishing an associated phenotypedatabase LycoTILL and a TILLING platform The data-base also serves as a portal for users to request materialsor TILLING experiments
ResultsGeneration of the mutant collectionRed Setter is a processing tomato variety that completesits reproductive cycle within 110 days it is a high produc-tive variety and its architecture permits mechanical har-vesting In order to optimize the EMS mutagenesis wefirst conducted a lsquokill-curversquo analysis using a range ofdoses from 03-15 EMS Two EMS doses were then cho-sen to generate the mutant collection The first mutagentreatment was performed by incubating about 11000seeds with 07 EMS that caused 20 reduction in seedgermination (LD20) with respect to untreated controlseeds The second mutant tomato population was pro-duced by treating 12000 seeds with 1 EMS (LD49) Outof the 23000 treated seeds 13000 seedlings were grownto fruit maturity in controlled conditions and M2 seedswere collected from individual M1 plants from differentplant internodes In total we collected 6667 distinct M2seed stocks among which 4741 and 1926 M2 seed stockswere obtained with 07 and 1 EMS treatment respec-tively For the production of M3 seed stocks three seedsper M2 family were sown in nursery grown to fruitmaturity in open field and M3 seeds harvested from indi-vidual M2 plants In total we collected 5508 M3 seedstocks (Table 1) as 1159 M2 families out of 6667 M2families didnrsquot produce M3 seeds Specifically there were585 M2 families (1233) generated from the 07 muta-genesis experiment and 574 M2 families (298) generatedfrom the 1 EMS treatment
M2 plant phenotypingThree plants per M2 family of Red Setter mutant popu-lation were scored for visual phenotype alteration at key
developmental stages from germination until fruitmaturation The data collected from individual plantswere organized in 17 classes and 51 subclasses of phe-notypes The vocabulary used to describe the pheno-types was derived from the plant phenotype ontologyand from previous investigation of systematic phenotyp-ing of the mutant tomato collection [6] We also intro-duced three new classes of phenotype alterations thecotyledon the fruit number and the seed germinationinto fruit The cotyledon class describes mutants show-ing alterations in the number color and morphology ofthe cotyledons The fruit number class describesmutants affected in the fruit yield and it contains threesubclasses few many or absence of fruits By adding thefruit number class and the subclass ldquoabsentrdquo we distin-guished the plant sterility due to the absence of fruitsfrom those caused by the seedless fruits The class ofphenotype seed germination into fruit describes mutantshaving pre-germinated seeds still in the fruit This phe-notype is presumed to result from an altered fruit fleshpH or by a hormonal imbalance [3233] The completelist of the vocabulary used and the number of linesfound in each major phenotype category are shown inTable 239 of tomato M2 plants showed at least one visual
mutant trait and among these lines 37 displayed multi-ple phenotypes that fall into more than one major classof phenotypes The most commonly observed pheno-types are related to the cotyledons (368) the leaf mor-phology (341) the habit (380) and the plant size (307)classes In Figure 1 examples of tomato mutant traitsare shown
LycoTILL databaseIn order to manage and integrate the recorded phenoty-pic data we implemented the database LycoTILL Lyco-TILL was developed according to a relational databasesystem interconnecting three main modules lines classand subclass of phenotypes The database interrogationcan be done according to the phenotypic catalog pre-viously reported or by plant code number (plant name)or family name The result displays all the collected phe-notypic information as well as photos of the mutantlines LycoTILL that is an evolving database is publicly
Table 1 Summary of the Red Setter tomato mutantcollection development
EMSConcentration
MutagenizedSeeds (No)
TransplantedM1 plants
M2 seedFamilies
M3 seedFamilies
07 (LD 20) 11000 8500 4741 4156
1 (LD 49) 12000 4500 1926 1352
Total 23000 13000 6667 5508
EMS concentrations number of seeds treated with the mutagen number ofM1 plants and collected M2 and M3 seed families are shown
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 2 of 8
accessible through the web interface httpwwwagro-biosittillingindexhtml[34]
Mutation discovery in Red Setter mutant collectionTo set up the tomato TILLING platform DNA sampleswere prepared from 5221 M3 families corresponding to3924 and 1297 families obtained by treatment with07 and 1 EMS respectively The selection of M3families was based on the M3 seed abundance 287families were discarded due to their low seed set DNAsamples were organized in pools of 8 M3 families Tovalidate the 07 and the 1 EMS Red Setter TILLINGplatforms and to estimate the mutation density of thepopulations we chose seven genes involved in fruitquality traits In particular we analysed ripening-inhibi-tor (RIN) and green ripe (Gr) genes involved in theripening of tomato fruit rab11 GTPase (Rab11a) andexpansin 1 (Exp1) genes related to the tomato softeningcontrol polygalacturonase (PG) gene involved in the cellwall hydrolysis and lycopene beta cyclase (Lcy-b) andlycopene epsilon cyclase (Lcy-e) involved in the carote-noid biosynthesis pathwayThe CODDLE program (Codons Optimized to Dis-
cover Deleterious Lesions [3536]) combined with thePRIMER3 tool [37] was used to define the best ampliconfor TILLING analysis Mutations were detected in theamplified targets using the mismatch-specific endonu-clease ENDO1 as previously described [1938]In total 95 kb of tomato genome were screened and
66 induced point mutations were identified (Table 3) ofwhich 41 and 25 mutations were derived from the 07and 1 EMS treated populations respectively Asexpected for EMS mutagenesis single nucleotide substi-tutions were identified both in coding and non-codingregions [17] Among the exonic identified mutations376 were silent and 624 were missense mutationswhile no stop codon type of mutations was foundUsing the SIFT programme (Sorting Intolerant FromTolerant [3940]) we analysed the putative impact of themissense mutations on the function of the tilled genesand 5714 of the missense mutations were predicteddeleterious for the proteinrsquos activity
Table 2 List of phenotype classes and subclasses
Class Subclass No ofplants
1 Seed No germination 3904
Seedling lethality 1674
2 Cotyledons Colour 264
Number 82
Morphology 17
Size 2
Other cotyledondevelopment
3
3 Plant size Small plant 303
Large plant 4
4 Plant habit Aborted growth 81
Branching 109
Internode length 16
Other plant habit 174
5 Leaf morphology Leaf complexity 27
Leaf size 98
Leaf texture 16
Leaf width 12
Other leaf development 188
6 Leaf colour Dark green leaf 19
Dull greengrey leaf 19
Purple leaf 17
Variegation 20
White leaf 4
Yellow leaf 28
Yellow-green leaf 79
7 Flowering Late flowering 142
8 Inflorescence Inflorescence structure 28
9 Flower morphology Flower homeotic mutation 5
Flower organ size 10
Flower organ width 12
Other flower morphology 4
10 Flower colour Pale yellow flower 13
White flower 5
11 Fruit size Large fruit 212
Small fruit 192
12 Fruit morphology Long fruit 43
Other fruit morphology 2
Rounded fruit 4
13 Fruit colour Dark red fruit 0
Green fruit 0
Orange fruit 0
Yellow fruit 3
14 Fruit number Absent 1073
Few 1393
Many 64
15 Sterility Partial sterility 2125
Total sterility 576
16 Seed germination intofruit
Seed germination into fruit 208
Table 2 List of phenotype classes and subclasses(Continued)
17 Disease and stressresponse
Necrosis 48
Wilting 80
Other disease response 0
Number of plants bearing a specific mutant phenotype Since a single plantmay also be recorded more than once if it was scored for more than onephenotype the numbers are not additive
The data reported in this table refer to the phase of M2 populationdevelopment
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 3 of 8
Figure 1 Examples of tomato mutant phenotypes Mutations affecting a) fruit morphology b) fruit colour c) plant habit d) leaf morphologye) cotyledon number f) flower morphology g) plant habit h) inflorescence structure
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 4 of 8
We calculated the mutation density in the seven tar-geted genes (Table 3) according to Dalmais et al [19]and Greene et al [17] We estimated the mutation den-sity at 1 mutation322 kb in the 1 EMS and 1 muta-tion574 kb in the 07 EMS Red Setter population
DiscussionThe optimization of mutagenesis is a critical parameterin establishing a good mutant collection for forward andreverse genetic studies In order to balance maximummutation density with an acceptable plant survival ratewe decided to utilise two different doses of EMS 07and 1 A strict correlation was observed between theEMS doses and the toxicity the mutation densityobtained and the frequency of phenotype alterations At1 EMS the plant fertility rate was 41 less than theplant treated with 07 In contrast the 1 EMS yielded178 fold more mutations per genome than 07 treatedplant At the phenotype level 60 of the mutant pheno-types scored in the M2 generation were derived fromthe 1 EMS treated seedsIn the TILLING screens we analysed seven genes and
discovered a total of 66 induced point mutations Thespectrum of expected mutations in an EMS-treated popu-lation is essentially GCAT transition because of the fre-quent alkylation of guanine residues by EMS [41] InArabidopsis maize wheat and pea more than 99 ofidentified mutations are GCAT transition [17192024]In our mutant Red Setter populations the percentage ofobserved GCAT transition was 60 in the 07 EMSpopulation and only 286 in the 1 EMS population Wealso identified GCTA ATTA ATCG GCCG and ATGC transversions (Table 4) The spectrum of observednucleotide changes in the 07 EMS-treated tomato popu-lation is similar to the spectrum of mutations observed inthe reverse TILLING screens of rice and barley for whichtransitions in the range of 70 are reported [2123] Incontrast the mutational spectrum of the 1 EMS popula-tion is different (ATCG GCCG see Table 4)
In order to rule out the probability that natural poly-morphisms introduced through pollen or seed contami-nation could be responsible for the non-GCATchanges observed in our mutant populations we ana-lysed the natural sequence variation of the tilled genesusing BLAST analysis [Additional file 1 SupplementalFigure S1] and EcoTILLING [42] of 150 tomato varietiesamong which 45 were Italian varieties (unpublisheddata) These analyses revealed that the nucleotidechanges identified by TILLING were present neither inthe available gene bank sequences nor in the screenedtomato varieties Based on this we concluded that thenon-GCAT changes discovered in the TILLING screensdo not result from cross pollination but are newallelic variants generated by the mutagen action Thisconclusion is also consistent with the non recovery ofnon-GCAT changes in multiple genes in the same indi-vidual as reported for the Seattle Arabidopsis popula-tion where rare contaminants were observed tointroduce polymorphisms in more than one gene in thesame plant [17]Based on this we speculate that tomato might differ
from other plant species in its mutagenic response toEMS doses Moreover we think that the choice of
Table 3 Mutation density in 07 EMS and 1 EMS Red Setter populations
Target gene No of screened M3 families No of identified mutations Overall mutation density
Name Amplicon size (kb) 07 EMS 1 EMS 07 EMS 1 EMS 07 EMS 1 EMS
Rab11a 0407 1373 713 1 3 1559 kb 197 kb
PG 2587 2791 963 7 2 11031 kb 11246 kb
Exp1 1025 3885 1284 14 6 1284 kb 1219 kb
RIN 1331 3885 1284 4 8 11293 kb 1214 kb
Gr 1409 3885 1284 5 3 11095 kb 1603 kb
Lcy-b 1274 3801 1252 4 3 11211 kb 1532 kb
Lcy-e 1414 3630 1185 6 0 1855 kb -
Totalmean 9447 41 25 1574 kb 1322 kb
The accession numbers of the analyzed seven target genes are the following Rab11a [GenBankAJ245570] PG [GenBankM37304] Exp1 [GenBankAF548376] RIN[GenBankAF448522] Gr [GenBankDQ372897] Lcy-b [GenBankCQ788383] Lcy-e [GenBankY14387] The number of screened M3 families the number of identifiedmutations and the overall mutation density estimated as described in Methods are reported both for 07 and 1 EMS Red Setter populations
Table 4 Spectrum of mutations identified in Red Setterpopulations and their comparison to other organisms
Mutation Tomato Red Setter Barley [23] Rice [21]
Type Change 07 EMS 1 EMS
Transition GCAT 600 286 700 700
Transversion GCTA 67 143 100 40
ATTA 200 143 100 150
ATGC 133 143 100 110
ATCG 0 143 0 0
GCCG 0 143 0 0
Total () 100 100 100 100
Distribution of the identified mutations in the different classes of nucleotidechanges In addition to the Red Setter mutant population data reported aspercentage values the mutation spectrum of barley and rice are also shown
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 5 of 8
ENDO1 enzyme was fundamental in the detection of alltypes of changes that we observed in our mutant popu-lations For its high specificity in recognizing mis-matches at the same rate [38] we could identifymutations never found in other plant species and with ahigher frequencyThe TILLING screening performed on seven tomato
genes permitted the calculation of the mutation densityin the two mutant Red Setter populations We estimatedthe mutation density at 1 mutation322 kb in the 1EMS and 1 mutation574 kb in the 07 EMS Red Set-ter population The mutation densities calculated in the1 and 07 EMS Red Setter populations are 23 and12 times respectively higher than one mutation every737 kb reported by Gady et al[29] in the 1 EMSTPAADASU tomato populationThis comparison demonstrate that our populations have
a higher number of mutations respect to those so far avail-able and published for tomato The high mutation densityof our populations especially for the 1 EMS oneincreases the size of allelic series that can be obtain andreduces the population size that needs to be screenedComparing the mutation densities estimated in the 1
and 07 EMS Red Setter populations with thosedescribed in other plant species results that they are 19and 34 times respectively lower than one mutation per170 kb reported previously for Arabidopsis [17] buttheir average (1448 kb) is similar to those reported formaize (1500 kb) [24] and rice (1500 kb) [22] and 22fold higher than one mutation per Mb found in barleyby Caldwell et al [23]So far higher mutation densities were observed only in
tetraploid wheat (140 kb) and hexaploid wheat (124kb) [20] Itrsquos likely that the polyploidy nature of theirgenomes helps in withstanding the mutagen action andconsequently higher mutation frequencies can beobtainedA mutant population is considered saturated with at
least a single ldquohitrdquo in every gene [6] In the Red SetterTILLING platform more than one mutation was identi-fied per gene analysed We can therefore conclude thatour mutant populations are sufficiently saturatedFurthermore by comparing other plant species used inpublic TILLING projects we can also affirm that ourpopulations are suitable for use in high-throughputmutation discovery
ConclusionsWe have developed a new genetic resource in thetomato Red Setter genetic background by means ofEMS mutagenesis The mutant collection is organized assuch that it could be used for both forward (EMS satu-rated mutant collection and the associated phenotypicdatabase) and reverse (high-throughput TILLING
platform) genetics in tomato for both basic science orcrop improvementThe Red Setter TILLING platform is open to the
scientific community to request TILLING screenings ingenes of interest and to obtain materialThese services can be requested via database that also
serves as portal for user need In addition to our plat-form at present other tomato TILLING platforms arepublicly accessible via web for requesting TILLING ser-vices (httpurgvevryinrafrUTILLdb and httptillingucdaviseduindexphpTomatoTilling) All the availabletomato TILLING platforms including the Red Setterone utilise mutant collections generated in differentgenetic backgrounds and with different EMS doseswhich increase the chance of obtaining a larger spec-trum of alleles Thus it is of interest for the scientificcommunity to have different tomato TILLING resourcesfor the possibility of identifying a greater number ofmutations of interest
MethodsEMS mutagenesisTomato seeds (cv Red Setter) were treated with two dif-ferent concentrations (07 and 1) of the chemicalmutagen EMS (ethylmethane sulfonate) for 18 h at RTwith gentle shaking The seeds were then thoroughlywashed dried and sown in compost in 96 well seedtrays which allowed an accurate determination of germi-nation frequencyControl seeds those not exposed to EMS treatment
were treated in the same manner
Plant materialM2 seeds for the M2 seed production M1 plants weregrown according to standard tomato agronomic practiceand at the end of the fruit-ripening phase M2 seedswere collected from individual M1 plants and keptseparateM3 seeds 3 seeds belonging to each mutant M2 family
were sown in 96 well seed trays and the correspondingseedlings transplanted in open field M3 seeds were col-lected from single M2 plants
M2 plant phenotyping and data collection toolsPhenotype scoring was performed at different develop-mental stages from seed germination through fruit ripen-ing and seed harvest Each mutant candidate wascharacterized according to 17 classes and 51 subclasseswhich are reported in Table 2 The selection of classes andsubclasses was for the most part carried out on the basisof the phenotypic catalog reported by Menda et al [6]Data were collected using a hand-held Asus MyPal
730w while pictures were taken by using the NikonCoolpix 4500 digital camera
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 6 of 8
Database constructionThe phenotype database was developed using MySQL[43] as a relational database system
DNA extraction and sample poolingFor each M3 family the genomic DNA was extractedfrom four young leaves collected from four differentplants of the same family The leaf samples were col-lected in 96-well plates and the DNA was isolated byusing DNeasy 96 Plant Kit (Quiagen Hilden Ger-many) The quantification of extracted DNA was car-ried out on a 08 agarose gel using l DNA(Invitrogen Carlsbad CA USA) as a concentrationreference Genomic DNA samples were then dilutedtenfold and pooled eightfold to obtain the workingmaterial
PCR amplification mutation detection and validationPCR amplification was based on nested-PCR and wascarried out using two couples of target-specific primers4 ng of pooled genomic DNA was used for the firstPCR and forward-strand primers and reverse-strand pri-mers 5rsquo-end labelled with IRDye 700 and IRDye 800 dye(LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) respectively wereemployed for the second PCR [19]Mutation detection was performed as previously
described [38] Electrophoresis were performed on a LI-COR 4300 (LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) and gel imageswere analysed using Adobe Photoshop software (AdobeSystems Inc San Joseacute CA USA)After discovery mutations were validated by sequence
analysisThe mutation frequency for each amplicon was calcu-
lated as previously described [19] For the average muta-tion frequency we have summed the sizes of allamplicons and we have divided by the total number ofidentified mutants The data were multiplied for 075 inorder to eliminate the missing evaluation due to thepresence of one-fourth wild-type alleles in the 121Mendelian segregation in M3 generation [17]
Additional file 1 Nucleotide alignment Additional data file 1 is afigure showing a comparison analysis of a tilled 240 bp region ofExpansin1 gene This analysis shows that the identified induced pointmutations are not part of natural variabilityClick here for file[ httpwwwbiomedcentralcomcontentsupplementary1756-0500-3-69-S1DOC ]
AbbreviationsBLAST Basic Local Alignment Search Tool CODDLE Codons Optimized toDiscover Deleterious Lesions ctrl control EMS ethylmethane sulfonate LDLethal Dose NCBI National Center for Biotechnology Information RT RoomTemperature SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant TILLING TargetingInduced Local Lesions IN Genomes
AcknowledgementsThis work was mainly funded by the Italian Ministry of University andResearch (MIUR ITALYCO Project DD ndeg 603RIC) and by the Europeanproject EU-SOL (Contract number FOOD-CT-2006-016214) through the 6thframework programmeThis work was also supported by a Marie Curie fellowship The authors thankJJ Giovannoni for providing the Rin gene sequence and Stephan Summerefor reviewing the English The authors wish to thank all colleagues ofMetapontum Agrobios for helping through all phases of the project
Author details1Metapontum Agrobios SS Jonica 106 Km 4482 75010 Metaponto (MT)Italy 2Uniteacute de Recherche en Geacutenomique Veacutegeacutetale UMR INRA-CNRS RueGaston Creacutemieux 91057 Evry Cedex France 3ENEA Casaccia ResearchCenter PO Box 2400 Roma 00100AD Italy
Authorsrsquo contributionsFCa planned and headed the development of the mutant populations APand GS took care and visually phenotyped the mutant populations OD setup the LycoTILL database SM extracted the DNA SM FP and GM didTILLING screens and analysis AB supervised the TILLING platform set up inEvry FCe and FCa co-directed the TILLING project in M Agrobios FCa andSM were responsible for drafting and revising the manuscript withcontributions from co-authorsAll authors read and approved the final manuscript
Competing interestsThe authors declare that they have no competing interests
Received 28 January 2010 Accepted 12 March 2010Published 12 March 2010
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40 Ng PC Henikoff S SIFT Predicting amino acid changes that affectprotein function Nucleic Acids Res 2003 31(13)3812-3814
41 Sega GA A review of the genetic effects of ethyl methanesulfonateMutat Res 1984 134113-142
42 Comai L Young K Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LCJohnson JE Burtner C Odden AR et al Efficient discovery of DNApolymorphisms in natural populations by Ecotilling Plant J 200437(5)778-786
43 MySQL [httpwwwmysqlcom]
doi1011861756-0500-3-69Cite this article as Minoia et al A new mutant genetic resource fortomato crop improvement by TILLING technology BMC Research Notes2010 369
Submit your next manuscript to BioMed Centraland take full advantage of
bull Convenient online submission
bull Thorough peer review
bull No space constraints or color figure charges
bull Immediate publication on acceptance
bull Inclusion in PubMed CAS Scopus and Google Scholar
bull Research which is freely available for redistribution
Submit your manuscript at wwwbiomedcentralcomsubmit
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 8 of 8
prerequisite for its application is the knowledge of thegene nucleotide sequences TILLING is a reverse geneticstrategy that utilises chemical mutagenesis for inducingvariability and sensitive molecular screenings to identifypoint mutations responsible for phenotype alterationThe strength and potency of this reverse genetic strategyhas been validated by its successful application in bothplants (Arabidopsis thaliana [16-18] pea [19] wheat[20] rice [2122] barley [23] maize [24] soybean [25]Lotus japonicus [26] sorghum [27] tomato [2829]) andanimals (zebrafish [30] drosophila [31])In the present paper we report the construction of a
high-quality tomato genetic mutant reference collectionwhich could be used for both forward and reversegenetic studies We have developed such a populationby mutagenizing the processing tomato variety Red Set-ter with EMS and establishing an associated phenotypedatabase LycoTILL and a TILLING platform The data-base also serves as a portal for users to request materialsor TILLING experiments
ResultsGeneration of the mutant collectionRed Setter is a processing tomato variety that completesits reproductive cycle within 110 days it is a high produc-tive variety and its architecture permits mechanical har-vesting In order to optimize the EMS mutagenesis wefirst conducted a lsquokill-curversquo analysis using a range ofdoses from 03-15 EMS Two EMS doses were then cho-sen to generate the mutant collection The first mutagentreatment was performed by incubating about 11000seeds with 07 EMS that caused 20 reduction in seedgermination (LD20) with respect to untreated controlseeds The second mutant tomato population was pro-duced by treating 12000 seeds with 1 EMS (LD49) Outof the 23000 treated seeds 13000 seedlings were grownto fruit maturity in controlled conditions and M2 seedswere collected from individual M1 plants from differentplant internodes In total we collected 6667 distinct M2seed stocks among which 4741 and 1926 M2 seed stockswere obtained with 07 and 1 EMS treatment respec-tively For the production of M3 seed stocks three seedsper M2 family were sown in nursery grown to fruitmaturity in open field and M3 seeds harvested from indi-vidual M2 plants In total we collected 5508 M3 seedstocks (Table 1) as 1159 M2 families out of 6667 M2families didnrsquot produce M3 seeds Specifically there were585 M2 families (1233) generated from the 07 muta-genesis experiment and 574 M2 families (298) generatedfrom the 1 EMS treatment
M2 plant phenotypingThree plants per M2 family of Red Setter mutant popu-lation were scored for visual phenotype alteration at key
developmental stages from germination until fruitmaturation The data collected from individual plantswere organized in 17 classes and 51 subclasses of phe-notypes The vocabulary used to describe the pheno-types was derived from the plant phenotype ontologyand from previous investigation of systematic phenotyp-ing of the mutant tomato collection [6] We also intro-duced three new classes of phenotype alterations thecotyledon the fruit number and the seed germinationinto fruit The cotyledon class describes mutants show-ing alterations in the number color and morphology ofthe cotyledons The fruit number class describesmutants affected in the fruit yield and it contains threesubclasses few many or absence of fruits By adding thefruit number class and the subclass ldquoabsentrdquo we distin-guished the plant sterility due to the absence of fruitsfrom those caused by the seedless fruits The class ofphenotype seed germination into fruit describes mutantshaving pre-germinated seeds still in the fruit This phe-notype is presumed to result from an altered fruit fleshpH or by a hormonal imbalance [3233] The completelist of the vocabulary used and the number of linesfound in each major phenotype category are shown inTable 239 of tomato M2 plants showed at least one visual
mutant trait and among these lines 37 displayed multi-ple phenotypes that fall into more than one major classof phenotypes The most commonly observed pheno-types are related to the cotyledons (368) the leaf mor-phology (341) the habit (380) and the plant size (307)classes In Figure 1 examples of tomato mutant traitsare shown
LycoTILL databaseIn order to manage and integrate the recorded phenoty-pic data we implemented the database LycoTILL Lyco-TILL was developed according to a relational databasesystem interconnecting three main modules lines classand subclass of phenotypes The database interrogationcan be done according to the phenotypic catalog pre-viously reported or by plant code number (plant name)or family name The result displays all the collected phe-notypic information as well as photos of the mutantlines LycoTILL that is an evolving database is publicly
Table 1 Summary of the Red Setter tomato mutantcollection development
EMSConcentration
MutagenizedSeeds (No)
TransplantedM1 plants
M2 seedFamilies
M3 seedFamilies
07 (LD 20) 11000 8500 4741 4156
1 (LD 49) 12000 4500 1926 1352
Total 23000 13000 6667 5508
EMS concentrations number of seeds treated with the mutagen number ofM1 plants and collected M2 and M3 seed families are shown
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 2 of 8
accessible through the web interface httpwwwagro-biosittillingindexhtml[34]
Mutation discovery in Red Setter mutant collectionTo set up the tomato TILLING platform DNA sampleswere prepared from 5221 M3 families corresponding to3924 and 1297 families obtained by treatment with07 and 1 EMS respectively The selection of M3families was based on the M3 seed abundance 287families were discarded due to their low seed set DNAsamples were organized in pools of 8 M3 families Tovalidate the 07 and the 1 EMS Red Setter TILLINGplatforms and to estimate the mutation density of thepopulations we chose seven genes involved in fruitquality traits In particular we analysed ripening-inhibi-tor (RIN) and green ripe (Gr) genes involved in theripening of tomato fruit rab11 GTPase (Rab11a) andexpansin 1 (Exp1) genes related to the tomato softeningcontrol polygalacturonase (PG) gene involved in the cellwall hydrolysis and lycopene beta cyclase (Lcy-b) andlycopene epsilon cyclase (Lcy-e) involved in the carote-noid biosynthesis pathwayThe CODDLE program (Codons Optimized to Dis-
cover Deleterious Lesions [3536]) combined with thePRIMER3 tool [37] was used to define the best ampliconfor TILLING analysis Mutations were detected in theamplified targets using the mismatch-specific endonu-clease ENDO1 as previously described [1938]In total 95 kb of tomato genome were screened and
66 induced point mutations were identified (Table 3) ofwhich 41 and 25 mutations were derived from the 07and 1 EMS treated populations respectively Asexpected for EMS mutagenesis single nucleotide substi-tutions were identified both in coding and non-codingregions [17] Among the exonic identified mutations376 were silent and 624 were missense mutationswhile no stop codon type of mutations was foundUsing the SIFT programme (Sorting Intolerant FromTolerant [3940]) we analysed the putative impact of themissense mutations on the function of the tilled genesand 5714 of the missense mutations were predicteddeleterious for the proteinrsquos activity
Table 2 List of phenotype classes and subclasses
Class Subclass No ofplants
1 Seed No germination 3904
Seedling lethality 1674
2 Cotyledons Colour 264
Number 82
Morphology 17
Size 2
Other cotyledondevelopment
3
3 Plant size Small plant 303
Large plant 4
4 Plant habit Aborted growth 81
Branching 109
Internode length 16
Other plant habit 174
5 Leaf morphology Leaf complexity 27
Leaf size 98
Leaf texture 16
Leaf width 12
Other leaf development 188
6 Leaf colour Dark green leaf 19
Dull greengrey leaf 19
Purple leaf 17
Variegation 20
White leaf 4
Yellow leaf 28
Yellow-green leaf 79
7 Flowering Late flowering 142
8 Inflorescence Inflorescence structure 28
9 Flower morphology Flower homeotic mutation 5
Flower organ size 10
Flower organ width 12
Other flower morphology 4
10 Flower colour Pale yellow flower 13
White flower 5
11 Fruit size Large fruit 212
Small fruit 192
12 Fruit morphology Long fruit 43
Other fruit morphology 2
Rounded fruit 4
13 Fruit colour Dark red fruit 0
Green fruit 0
Orange fruit 0
Yellow fruit 3
14 Fruit number Absent 1073
Few 1393
Many 64
15 Sterility Partial sterility 2125
Total sterility 576
16 Seed germination intofruit
Seed germination into fruit 208
Table 2 List of phenotype classes and subclasses(Continued)
17 Disease and stressresponse
Necrosis 48
Wilting 80
Other disease response 0
Number of plants bearing a specific mutant phenotype Since a single plantmay also be recorded more than once if it was scored for more than onephenotype the numbers are not additive
The data reported in this table refer to the phase of M2 populationdevelopment
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 3 of 8
Figure 1 Examples of tomato mutant phenotypes Mutations affecting a) fruit morphology b) fruit colour c) plant habit d) leaf morphologye) cotyledon number f) flower morphology g) plant habit h) inflorescence structure
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 4 of 8
We calculated the mutation density in the seven tar-geted genes (Table 3) according to Dalmais et al [19]and Greene et al [17] We estimated the mutation den-sity at 1 mutation322 kb in the 1 EMS and 1 muta-tion574 kb in the 07 EMS Red Setter population
DiscussionThe optimization of mutagenesis is a critical parameterin establishing a good mutant collection for forward andreverse genetic studies In order to balance maximummutation density with an acceptable plant survival ratewe decided to utilise two different doses of EMS 07and 1 A strict correlation was observed between theEMS doses and the toxicity the mutation densityobtained and the frequency of phenotype alterations At1 EMS the plant fertility rate was 41 less than theplant treated with 07 In contrast the 1 EMS yielded178 fold more mutations per genome than 07 treatedplant At the phenotype level 60 of the mutant pheno-types scored in the M2 generation were derived fromthe 1 EMS treated seedsIn the TILLING screens we analysed seven genes and
discovered a total of 66 induced point mutations Thespectrum of expected mutations in an EMS-treated popu-lation is essentially GCAT transition because of the fre-quent alkylation of guanine residues by EMS [41] InArabidopsis maize wheat and pea more than 99 ofidentified mutations are GCAT transition [17192024]In our mutant Red Setter populations the percentage ofobserved GCAT transition was 60 in the 07 EMSpopulation and only 286 in the 1 EMS population Wealso identified GCTA ATTA ATCG GCCG and ATGC transversions (Table 4) The spectrum of observednucleotide changes in the 07 EMS-treated tomato popu-lation is similar to the spectrum of mutations observed inthe reverse TILLING screens of rice and barley for whichtransitions in the range of 70 are reported [2123] Incontrast the mutational spectrum of the 1 EMS popula-tion is different (ATCG GCCG see Table 4)
In order to rule out the probability that natural poly-morphisms introduced through pollen or seed contami-nation could be responsible for the non-GCATchanges observed in our mutant populations we ana-lysed the natural sequence variation of the tilled genesusing BLAST analysis [Additional file 1 SupplementalFigure S1] and EcoTILLING [42] of 150 tomato varietiesamong which 45 were Italian varieties (unpublisheddata) These analyses revealed that the nucleotidechanges identified by TILLING were present neither inthe available gene bank sequences nor in the screenedtomato varieties Based on this we concluded that thenon-GCAT changes discovered in the TILLING screensdo not result from cross pollination but are newallelic variants generated by the mutagen action Thisconclusion is also consistent with the non recovery ofnon-GCAT changes in multiple genes in the same indi-vidual as reported for the Seattle Arabidopsis popula-tion where rare contaminants were observed tointroduce polymorphisms in more than one gene in thesame plant [17]Based on this we speculate that tomato might differ
from other plant species in its mutagenic response toEMS doses Moreover we think that the choice of
Table 3 Mutation density in 07 EMS and 1 EMS Red Setter populations
Target gene No of screened M3 families No of identified mutations Overall mutation density
Name Amplicon size (kb) 07 EMS 1 EMS 07 EMS 1 EMS 07 EMS 1 EMS
Rab11a 0407 1373 713 1 3 1559 kb 197 kb
PG 2587 2791 963 7 2 11031 kb 11246 kb
Exp1 1025 3885 1284 14 6 1284 kb 1219 kb
RIN 1331 3885 1284 4 8 11293 kb 1214 kb
Gr 1409 3885 1284 5 3 11095 kb 1603 kb
Lcy-b 1274 3801 1252 4 3 11211 kb 1532 kb
Lcy-e 1414 3630 1185 6 0 1855 kb -
Totalmean 9447 41 25 1574 kb 1322 kb
The accession numbers of the analyzed seven target genes are the following Rab11a [GenBankAJ245570] PG [GenBankM37304] Exp1 [GenBankAF548376] RIN[GenBankAF448522] Gr [GenBankDQ372897] Lcy-b [GenBankCQ788383] Lcy-e [GenBankY14387] The number of screened M3 families the number of identifiedmutations and the overall mutation density estimated as described in Methods are reported both for 07 and 1 EMS Red Setter populations
Table 4 Spectrum of mutations identified in Red Setterpopulations and their comparison to other organisms
Mutation Tomato Red Setter Barley [23] Rice [21]
Type Change 07 EMS 1 EMS
Transition GCAT 600 286 700 700
Transversion GCTA 67 143 100 40
ATTA 200 143 100 150
ATGC 133 143 100 110
ATCG 0 143 0 0
GCCG 0 143 0 0
Total () 100 100 100 100
Distribution of the identified mutations in the different classes of nucleotidechanges In addition to the Red Setter mutant population data reported aspercentage values the mutation spectrum of barley and rice are also shown
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 5 of 8
ENDO1 enzyme was fundamental in the detection of alltypes of changes that we observed in our mutant popu-lations For its high specificity in recognizing mis-matches at the same rate [38] we could identifymutations never found in other plant species and with ahigher frequencyThe TILLING screening performed on seven tomato
genes permitted the calculation of the mutation densityin the two mutant Red Setter populations We estimatedthe mutation density at 1 mutation322 kb in the 1EMS and 1 mutation574 kb in the 07 EMS Red Set-ter population The mutation densities calculated in the1 and 07 EMS Red Setter populations are 23 and12 times respectively higher than one mutation every737 kb reported by Gady et al[29] in the 1 EMSTPAADASU tomato populationThis comparison demonstrate that our populations have
a higher number of mutations respect to those so far avail-able and published for tomato The high mutation densityof our populations especially for the 1 EMS oneincreases the size of allelic series that can be obtain andreduces the population size that needs to be screenedComparing the mutation densities estimated in the 1
and 07 EMS Red Setter populations with thosedescribed in other plant species results that they are 19and 34 times respectively lower than one mutation per170 kb reported previously for Arabidopsis [17] buttheir average (1448 kb) is similar to those reported formaize (1500 kb) [24] and rice (1500 kb) [22] and 22fold higher than one mutation per Mb found in barleyby Caldwell et al [23]So far higher mutation densities were observed only in
tetraploid wheat (140 kb) and hexaploid wheat (124kb) [20] Itrsquos likely that the polyploidy nature of theirgenomes helps in withstanding the mutagen action andconsequently higher mutation frequencies can beobtainedA mutant population is considered saturated with at
least a single ldquohitrdquo in every gene [6] In the Red SetterTILLING platform more than one mutation was identi-fied per gene analysed We can therefore conclude thatour mutant populations are sufficiently saturatedFurthermore by comparing other plant species used inpublic TILLING projects we can also affirm that ourpopulations are suitable for use in high-throughputmutation discovery
ConclusionsWe have developed a new genetic resource in thetomato Red Setter genetic background by means ofEMS mutagenesis The mutant collection is organized assuch that it could be used for both forward (EMS satu-rated mutant collection and the associated phenotypicdatabase) and reverse (high-throughput TILLING
platform) genetics in tomato for both basic science orcrop improvementThe Red Setter TILLING platform is open to the
scientific community to request TILLING screenings ingenes of interest and to obtain materialThese services can be requested via database that also
serves as portal for user need In addition to our plat-form at present other tomato TILLING platforms arepublicly accessible via web for requesting TILLING ser-vices (httpurgvevryinrafrUTILLdb and httptillingucdaviseduindexphpTomatoTilling) All the availabletomato TILLING platforms including the Red Setterone utilise mutant collections generated in differentgenetic backgrounds and with different EMS doseswhich increase the chance of obtaining a larger spec-trum of alleles Thus it is of interest for the scientificcommunity to have different tomato TILLING resourcesfor the possibility of identifying a greater number ofmutations of interest
MethodsEMS mutagenesisTomato seeds (cv Red Setter) were treated with two dif-ferent concentrations (07 and 1) of the chemicalmutagen EMS (ethylmethane sulfonate) for 18 h at RTwith gentle shaking The seeds were then thoroughlywashed dried and sown in compost in 96 well seedtrays which allowed an accurate determination of germi-nation frequencyControl seeds those not exposed to EMS treatment
were treated in the same manner
Plant materialM2 seeds for the M2 seed production M1 plants weregrown according to standard tomato agronomic practiceand at the end of the fruit-ripening phase M2 seedswere collected from individual M1 plants and keptseparateM3 seeds 3 seeds belonging to each mutant M2 family
were sown in 96 well seed trays and the correspondingseedlings transplanted in open field M3 seeds were col-lected from single M2 plants
M2 plant phenotyping and data collection toolsPhenotype scoring was performed at different develop-mental stages from seed germination through fruit ripen-ing and seed harvest Each mutant candidate wascharacterized according to 17 classes and 51 subclasseswhich are reported in Table 2 The selection of classes andsubclasses was for the most part carried out on the basisof the phenotypic catalog reported by Menda et al [6]Data were collected using a hand-held Asus MyPal
730w while pictures were taken by using the NikonCoolpix 4500 digital camera
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 6 of 8
Database constructionThe phenotype database was developed using MySQL[43] as a relational database system
DNA extraction and sample poolingFor each M3 family the genomic DNA was extractedfrom four young leaves collected from four differentplants of the same family The leaf samples were col-lected in 96-well plates and the DNA was isolated byusing DNeasy 96 Plant Kit (Quiagen Hilden Ger-many) The quantification of extracted DNA was car-ried out on a 08 agarose gel using l DNA(Invitrogen Carlsbad CA USA) as a concentrationreference Genomic DNA samples were then dilutedtenfold and pooled eightfold to obtain the workingmaterial
PCR amplification mutation detection and validationPCR amplification was based on nested-PCR and wascarried out using two couples of target-specific primers4 ng of pooled genomic DNA was used for the firstPCR and forward-strand primers and reverse-strand pri-mers 5rsquo-end labelled with IRDye 700 and IRDye 800 dye(LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) respectively wereemployed for the second PCR [19]Mutation detection was performed as previously
described [38] Electrophoresis were performed on a LI-COR 4300 (LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) and gel imageswere analysed using Adobe Photoshop software (AdobeSystems Inc San Joseacute CA USA)After discovery mutations were validated by sequence
analysisThe mutation frequency for each amplicon was calcu-
lated as previously described [19] For the average muta-tion frequency we have summed the sizes of allamplicons and we have divided by the total number ofidentified mutants The data were multiplied for 075 inorder to eliminate the missing evaluation due to thepresence of one-fourth wild-type alleles in the 121Mendelian segregation in M3 generation [17]
Additional file 1 Nucleotide alignment Additional data file 1 is afigure showing a comparison analysis of a tilled 240 bp region ofExpansin1 gene This analysis shows that the identified induced pointmutations are not part of natural variabilityClick here for file[ httpwwwbiomedcentralcomcontentsupplementary1756-0500-3-69-S1DOC ]
AbbreviationsBLAST Basic Local Alignment Search Tool CODDLE Codons Optimized toDiscover Deleterious Lesions ctrl control EMS ethylmethane sulfonate LDLethal Dose NCBI National Center for Biotechnology Information RT RoomTemperature SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant TILLING TargetingInduced Local Lesions IN Genomes
AcknowledgementsThis work was mainly funded by the Italian Ministry of University andResearch (MIUR ITALYCO Project DD ndeg 603RIC) and by the Europeanproject EU-SOL (Contract number FOOD-CT-2006-016214) through the 6thframework programmeThis work was also supported by a Marie Curie fellowship The authors thankJJ Giovannoni for providing the Rin gene sequence and Stephan Summerefor reviewing the English The authors wish to thank all colleagues ofMetapontum Agrobios for helping through all phases of the project
Author details1Metapontum Agrobios SS Jonica 106 Km 4482 75010 Metaponto (MT)Italy 2Uniteacute de Recherche en Geacutenomique Veacutegeacutetale UMR INRA-CNRS RueGaston Creacutemieux 91057 Evry Cedex France 3ENEA Casaccia ResearchCenter PO Box 2400 Roma 00100AD Italy
Authorsrsquo contributionsFCa planned and headed the development of the mutant populations APand GS took care and visually phenotyped the mutant populations OD setup the LycoTILL database SM extracted the DNA SM FP and GM didTILLING screens and analysis AB supervised the TILLING platform set up inEvry FCe and FCa co-directed the TILLING project in M Agrobios FCa andSM were responsible for drafting and revising the manuscript withcontributions from co-authorsAll authors read and approved the final manuscript
Competing interestsThe authors declare that they have no competing interests
Received 28 January 2010 Accepted 12 March 2010Published 12 March 2010
References1 Tomato Functional Genomics Database [httptedbticornelledu]2 Fei Z Tang X Alba RM White JA Ronning CM Martin GB Tanksley SD
Giovannoni JJ Comprehensive EST analysis of tomato and comparativegenomics of fruit ripening Plant J 2004 40(1)47-59
3 Chiusano ML DrsquoAgostino N Traini A Licciardiello C Raimondo EAversano M Frusciante L Monti L ISOL an Italian SOLAnaceaegenomics resource BMC Bioinformatics 2007 9(Suppl)S7
4 Moco S Bino RJ Vorst O Verhoeven HA de Groot J van Beek TAVervoort J de Vos CH A liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based metabolome database for tomato Plant Physiol 2006141(4)1205-1218
5 TGRC Tomato Genetic Resourse Center [httptgrcucdavisedu]6 Menda N Semel Y Peled D Eshed Y Zamir D In silico screening of a
saturated mutation library of tomato Plant Journal 2004 38861-8727 Watanabe S Mizoguchi T Aoki K Kubo Y Mori H Imanishi S Yamazaki Y
Shibata D Ezura H Ethylmethansulfonate (EMS) mutagenesis of Solanumlycopersicon cv Micro-Tom for large-scale mutant screens PlantBiotechnololy 2007 2433-38
8 Analysis of the genome sequence of the flowering plant Arabidopsisthaliana Nature 2000 408(6814)796-815
9 The map-based sequence of the rice genome Nature 2005436(7052)793-800
10 Jaillon O Aury JM Noel B Policriti A Clepet C Casagrande A Choisne NAubourg S Vitulo N Jubin C et al The grapevine genome sequencesuggests ancestral hexaploidization in major angiosperm phyla Nature2007 449(7161)463-467
11 International Tomato Genome Sequencing Project [httpwwwsgncornelleduabouttomato_sequencingpl]
12 Mathews H Clendennen SK Caldwell CG Liu XL Connors K Matheis NSchuster DK Menasco DJ Wagoner W Lightner J et al Activation taggingin tomato identifies a transcriptional regulator of anthocyaninbiosynthesis modification and transport Plant Cell 2003 15(8)1689-1703
13 Cooley MB Goldsbrough AP Still DW Yoder JI Site-selected insertionalmutagenesis of tomato with maize Ac and Ds elements Mol Gen Genet1996 252(1-2)184-194
14 McCallum CM Comai L Greene EA Henikoff S Targeting Induced LocalLesions IN Genomes (TILLING) for plant functional genomics PlantPhysiol 2000 123(2)439-442
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Page 7 of 8
15 Colbert T Till BJ Tompa R Reynolds SH Steine MN Yeung ATMcCallum CM Comai L Henikoff S High-throughput screening forinduced point mutations Plant Physiol 2001 126480-484
16 Till BJ Colbert T Codomo C Enns L Johnson J Reynolds SH Henikoff JGGreene EA Steine MN Comai L et al High-throughput TILLING forArabidopsis Methods Mol Biol 2006 323127-135
17 Greene EA Codomo CA Taylor NE Henikoff JG Till BJ Reynolds SHEnns LC Burtner C Johnson JE Odden AR et al Spectrum of chemicallyinduced mutations from a large-scale reverse-genetic screen inArabidopsis Genetics 2003 164(2)731-740
18 Martin B Ramiro M Martinez-Zapater JM Alonso-Blanco C A high-densitycollection of EMS-induced mutations for TILLING in Landsberg erectagenetic background of Arabidopsis BMC Plant Biol 2009 9147
19 Dalmais M Schmidt J Le Signor C Moussy F Burstin J Savois V Aubert GBrunaud V de Oliveira Y Guichard C et al UTILLdb a Pisum sativum insilico forward and reverse genetics tool Genome Biol 2008 9(2)R43
20 Slade AJ Fuerstenberg SI Loeffler D Steine MN Facciotti D A reversegenetic nontransgenic approach to wheat crop improvement byTILLING Nat Biotechnol 2005 23(1)75-81
21 Till BJ Cooper J Tai TH Colowit P Greene EA Henikoff S Comai LDiscovery of chemically induced mutations in rice by TILLING BMC PlantBiol 2007 719
22 Wu JL Wu C Lei C Baraoidan M Bordeos A Madamba MR Ramos-Pamplona M Mauleon R Portugal A Ulat VJ et al Chemical- andirradiation-induced mutants of indica rice IR64 for forward and reversegenetics Plant Mol Biol 2005 59(1)85-97
23 Caldwell DG McCallum N Shaw P Muehlbauer GJ Marshall DF Waugh RA structured mutant population for forward and reverse genetics inBarley (Hordeum vulgare L) Plant Journal 2004 40143-150
24 Till BJ Reynolds SH Weil C Springer N Burtner C Young K Bowers ECodomo CA Enns LC Odden AR et al Discovery of induced pointmutations in maize genes by TILLING BMC Plant Biol 2004 412
25 Cooper JL Till BJ Laport RG Darlow MC Kleffner JM Jamai A El-Mellouki TLiu S Ritchie R Nielsen N et al TILLING to detect induced mutations insoybean BMC Plant Biol 2008 89
26 Perry JA Wang TL Welham TJ Gardner S Pike JM Yoshida S Parniske MA TILLING reverse genetics tool and a web-accessible collection ofmutants of the legume Lotus japonicus Plant Physiol 2003131(3)866-871
27 Xin Z Wang ML Barkley NA Burow G Franks C Pederson G Burke JApplying genotyping (TILLING) and phenotyping analyses to elucidategene function in a chemically induced sorghum mutant populationBMC Plant Biol 2008 8103
28 Rigola D van Oeveren J Janssen A Bonne A Schneiders H Poel van derHJ van Orsouw NJ Hogers RC de Both MT van Eijk MJ High-throughputdetection of induced mutations and natural variation using KeyPointtechnology PLoS One 2009 4(3)e4761
29 Gady AL Hermans FW Wal Van de MH van Loo EN Visser RG Bachem CWImplementation of two high through-put techniques in a novelapplication detecting point mutations in large EMS mutated plantpopulations Plant Methods 2009 513
30 Moens CB Donn TM Wolf-Saxon ER Ma TP Reverse genetics in zebrafishby TILLING Brief Funct Genomic Proteomic 2008 7(6)454-459
31 Winkler S Schwabedissen A Backasch D Bokel C Seidel C Bonisch SFurthauer M Kuhrs A Cobreros L Brand M et al Target-selected mutantscreen by TILLING in Drosophila Genome Res 2005 15(5)718-723
32 Matilla AJ Ethylene in seed formation and germination Seed ScienceResearch 2000 10111-126
33 Kucera B Cohn MA Leubner-Metzger G Plant hormone interactionsduring seed dormancy release and germination Seed Science Research2005 15281-307
34 LycoTILL Tomato Mutant DB [httpwwwagrobiosittillingindexhtml]35 Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LC Johnson JE
Burtner C Odden AR Young K Taylor NE et al Large-scale discovery ofinduced point mutations with high-throughput TILLING Genome Res2003 13(3)524-530
36 CODDLE Codons Optimized to Discover DeleteriousLEsions [httpwwwproweborgcoddle]
37 Rozen S H S Primer3 on the WWW for general users and for biologistprogrammers Bioinformatics Methods and Protocols Methods in MolecularBiology Totowa NJ Humana PressKrawetz SA Misener S 1999 365-386
38 Triques K Sturbois B Gallais S Dalmais M Chauvin S Clepet C Aubourg SRameau C Caboche M Bendahmane A Characterization of Arabidopsisthaliana mismatch specific endonucleases application to mutationdiscovery by TILLING in pea Plant J 2007 51(6)1116-1125
39 SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant [httpblocksfhcrcorgsiftSIFThtml]
40 Ng PC Henikoff S SIFT Predicting amino acid changes that affectprotein function Nucleic Acids Res 2003 31(13)3812-3814
41 Sega GA A review of the genetic effects of ethyl methanesulfonateMutat Res 1984 134113-142
42 Comai L Young K Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LCJohnson JE Burtner C Odden AR et al Efficient discovery of DNApolymorphisms in natural populations by Ecotilling Plant J 200437(5)778-786
43 MySQL [httpwwwmysqlcom]
doi1011861756-0500-3-69Cite this article as Minoia et al A new mutant genetic resource fortomato crop improvement by TILLING technology BMC Research Notes2010 369
Submit your next manuscript to BioMed Centraland take full advantage of
bull Convenient online submission
bull Thorough peer review
bull No space constraints or color figure charges
bull Immediate publication on acceptance
bull Inclusion in PubMed CAS Scopus and Google Scholar
bull Research which is freely available for redistribution
Submit your manuscript at wwwbiomedcentralcomsubmit
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 8 of 8
accessible through the web interface httpwwwagro-biosittillingindexhtml[34]
Mutation discovery in Red Setter mutant collectionTo set up the tomato TILLING platform DNA sampleswere prepared from 5221 M3 families corresponding to3924 and 1297 families obtained by treatment with07 and 1 EMS respectively The selection of M3families was based on the M3 seed abundance 287families were discarded due to their low seed set DNAsamples were organized in pools of 8 M3 families Tovalidate the 07 and the 1 EMS Red Setter TILLINGplatforms and to estimate the mutation density of thepopulations we chose seven genes involved in fruitquality traits In particular we analysed ripening-inhibi-tor (RIN) and green ripe (Gr) genes involved in theripening of tomato fruit rab11 GTPase (Rab11a) andexpansin 1 (Exp1) genes related to the tomato softeningcontrol polygalacturonase (PG) gene involved in the cellwall hydrolysis and lycopene beta cyclase (Lcy-b) andlycopene epsilon cyclase (Lcy-e) involved in the carote-noid biosynthesis pathwayThe CODDLE program (Codons Optimized to Dis-
cover Deleterious Lesions [3536]) combined with thePRIMER3 tool [37] was used to define the best ampliconfor TILLING analysis Mutations were detected in theamplified targets using the mismatch-specific endonu-clease ENDO1 as previously described [1938]In total 95 kb of tomato genome were screened and
66 induced point mutations were identified (Table 3) ofwhich 41 and 25 mutations were derived from the 07and 1 EMS treated populations respectively Asexpected for EMS mutagenesis single nucleotide substi-tutions were identified both in coding and non-codingregions [17] Among the exonic identified mutations376 were silent and 624 were missense mutationswhile no stop codon type of mutations was foundUsing the SIFT programme (Sorting Intolerant FromTolerant [3940]) we analysed the putative impact of themissense mutations on the function of the tilled genesand 5714 of the missense mutations were predicteddeleterious for the proteinrsquos activity
Table 2 List of phenotype classes and subclasses
Class Subclass No ofplants
1 Seed No germination 3904
Seedling lethality 1674
2 Cotyledons Colour 264
Number 82
Morphology 17
Size 2
Other cotyledondevelopment
3
3 Plant size Small plant 303
Large plant 4
4 Plant habit Aborted growth 81
Branching 109
Internode length 16
Other plant habit 174
5 Leaf morphology Leaf complexity 27
Leaf size 98
Leaf texture 16
Leaf width 12
Other leaf development 188
6 Leaf colour Dark green leaf 19
Dull greengrey leaf 19
Purple leaf 17
Variegation 20
White leaf 4
Yellow leaf 28
Yellow-green leaf 79
7 Flowering Late flowering 142
8 Inflorescence Inflorescence structure 28
9 Flower morphology Flower homeotic mutation 5
Flower organ size 10
Flower organ width 12
Other flower morphology 4
10 Flower colour Pale yellow flower 13
White flower 5
11 Fruit size Large fruit 212
Small fruit 192
12 Fruit morphology Long fruit 43
Other fruit morphology 2
Rounded fruit 4
13 Fruit colour Dark red fruit 0
Green fruit 0
Orange fruit 0
Yellow fruit 3
14 Fruit number Absent 1073
Few 1393
Many 64
15 Sterility Partial sterility 2125
Total sterility 576
16 Seed germination intofruit
Seed germination into fruit 208
Table 2 List of phenotype classes and subclasses(Continued)
17 Disease and stressresponse
Necrosis 48
Wilting 80
Other disease response 0
Number of plants bearing a specific mutant phenotype Since a single plantmay also be recorded more than once if it was scored for more than onephenotype the numbers are not additive
The data reported in this table refer to the phase of M2 populationdevelopment
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 3 of 8
Figure 1 Examples of tomato mutant phenotypes Mutations affecting a) fruit morphology b) fruit colour c) plant habit d) leaf morphologye) cotyledon number f) flower morphology g) plant habit h) inflorescence structure
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 4 of 8
We calculated the mutation density in the seven tar-geted genes (Table 3) according to Dalmais et al [19]and Greene et al [17] We estimated the mutation den-sity at 1 mutation322 kb in the 1 EMS and 1 muta-tion574 kb in the 07 EMS Red Setter population
DiscussionThe optimization of mutagenesis is a critical parameterin establishing a good mutant collection for forward andreverse genetic studies In order to balance maximummutation density with an acceptable plant survival ratewe decided to utilise two different doses of EMS 07and 1 A strict correlation was observed between theEMS doses and the toxicity the mutation densityobtained and the frequency of phenotype alterations At1 EMS the plant fertility rate was 41 less than theplant treated with 07 In contrast the 1 EMS yielded178 fold more mutations per genome than 07 treatedplant At the phenotype level 60 of the mutant pheno-types scored in the M2 generation were derived fromthe 1 EMS treated seedsIn the TILLING screens we analysed seven genes and
discovered a total of 66 induced point mutations Thespectrum of expected mutations in an EMS-treated popu-lation is essentially GCAT transition because of the fre-quent alkylation of guanine residues by EMS [41] InArabidopsis maize wheat and pea more than 99 ofidentified mutations are GCAT transition [17192024]In our mutant Red Setter populations the percentage ofobserved GCAT transition was 60 in the 07 EMSpopulation and only 286 in the 1 EMS population Wealso identified GCTA ATTA ATCG GCCG and ATGC transversions (Table 4) The spectrum of observednucleotide changes in the 07 EMS-treated tomato popu-lation is similar to the spectrum of mutations observed inthe reverse TILLING screens of rice and barley for whichtransitions in the range of 70 are reported [2123] Incontrast the mutational spectrum of the 1 EMS popula-tion is different (ATCG GCCG see Table 4)
In order to rule out the probability that natural poly-morphisms introduced through pollen or seed contami-nation could be responsible for the non-GCATchanges observed in our mutant populations we ana-lysed the natural sequence variation of the tilled genesusing BLAST analysis [Additional file 1 SupplementalFigure S1] and EcoTILLING [42] of 150 tomato varietiesamong which 45 were Italian varieties (unpublisheddata) These analyses revealed that the nucleotidechanges identified by TILLING were present neither inthe available gene bank sequences nor in the screenedtomato varieties Based on this we concluded that thenon-GCAT changes discovered in the TILLING screensdo not result from cross pollination but are newallelic variants generated by the mutagen action Thisconclusion is also consistent with the non recovery ofnon-GCAT changes in multiple genes in the same indi-vidual as reported for the Seattle Arabidopsis popula-tion where rare contaminants were observed tointroduce polymorphisms in more than one gene in thesame plant [17]Based on this we speculate that tomato might differ
from other plant species in its mutagenic response toEMS doses Moreover we think that the choice of
Table 3 Mutation density in 07 EMS and 1 EMS Red Setter populations
Target gene No of screened M3 families No of identified mutations Overall mutation density
Name Amplicon size (kb) 07 EMS 1 EMS 07 EMS 1 EMS 07 EMS 1 EMS
Rab11a 0407 1373 713 1 3 1559 kb 197 kb
PG 2587 2791 963 7 2 11031 kb 11246 kb
Exp1 1025 3885 1284 14 6 1284 kb 1219 kb
RIN 1331 3885 1284 4 8 11293 kb 1214 kb
Gr 1409 3885 1284 5 3 11095 kb 1603 kb
Lcy-b 1274 3801 1252 4 3 11211 kb 1532 kb
Lcy-e 1414 3630 1185 6 0 1855 kb -
Totalmean 9447 41 25 1574 kb 1322 kb
The accession numbers of the analyzed seven target genes are the following Rab11a [GenBankAJ245570] PG [GenBankM37304] Exp1 [GenBankAF548376] RIN[GenBankAF448522] Gr [GenBankDQ372897] Lcy-b [GenBankCQ788383] Lcy-e [GenBankY14387] The number of screened M3 families the number of identifiedmutations and the overall mutation density estimated as described in Methods are reported both for 07 and 1 EMS Red Setter populations
Table 4 Spectrum of mutations identified in Red Setterpopulations and their comparison to other organisms
Mutation Tomato Red Setter Barley [23] Rice [21]
Type Change 07 EMS 1 EMS
Transition GCAT 600 286 700 700
Transversion GCTA 67 143 100 40
ATTA 200 143 100 150
ATGC 133 143 100 110
ATCG 0 143 0 0
GCCG 0 143 0 0
Total () 100 100 100 100
Distribution of the identified mutations in the different classes of nucleotidechanges In addition to the Red Setter mutant population data reported aspercentage values the mutation spectrum of barley and rice are also shown
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 5 of 8
ENDO1 enzyme was fundamental in the detection of alltypes of changes that we observed in our mutant popu-lations For its high specificity in recognizing mis-matches at the same rate [38] we could identifymutations never found in other plant species and with ahigher frequencyThe TILLING screening performed on seven tomato
genes permitted the calculation of the mutation densityin the two mutant Red Setter populations We estimatedthe mutation density at 1 mutation322 kb in the 1EMS and 1 mutation574 kb in the 07 EMS Red Set-ter population The mutation densities calculated in the1 and 07 EMS Red Setter populations are 23 and12 times respectively higher than one mutation every737 kb reported by Gady et al[29] in the 1 EMSTPAADASU tomato populationThis comparison demonstrate that our populations have
a higher number of mutations respect to those so far avail-able and published for tomato The high mutation densityof our populations especially for the 1 EMS oneincreases the size of allelic series that can be obtain andreduces the population size that needs to be screenedComparing the mutation densities estimated in the 1
and 07 EMS Red Setter populations with thosedescribed in other plant species results that they are 19and 34 times respectively lower than one mutation per170 kb reported previously for Arabidopsis [17] buttheir average (1448 kb) is similar to those reported formaize (1500 kb) [24] and rice (1500 kb) [22] and 22fold higher than one mutation per Mb found in barleyby Caldwell et al [23]So far higher mutation densities were observed only in
tetraploid wheat (140 kb) and hexaploid wheat (124kb) [20] Itrsquos likely that the polyploidy nature of theirgenomes helps in withstanding the mutagen action andconsequently higher mutation frequencies can beobtainedA mutant population is considered saturated with at
least a single ldquohitrdquo in every gene [6] In the Red SetterTILLING platform more than one mutation was identi-fied per gene analysed We can therefore conclude thatour mutant populations are sufficiently saturatedFurthermore by comparing other plant species used inpublic TILLING projects we can also affirm that ourpopulations are suitable for use in high-throughputmutation discovery
ConclusionsWe have developed a new genetic resource in thetomato Red Setter genetic background by means ofEMS mutagenesis The mutant collection is organized assuch that it could be used for both forward (EMS satu-rated mutant collection and the associated phenotypicdatabase) and reverse (high-throughput TILLING
platform) genetics in tomato for both basic science orcrop improvementThe Red Setter TILLING platform is open to the
scientific community to request TILLING screenings ingenes of interest and to obtain materialThese services can be requested via database that also
serves as portal for user need In addition to our plat-form at present other tomato TILLING platforms arepublicly accessible via web for requesting TILLING ser-vices (httpurgvevryinrafrUTILLdb and httptillingucdaviseduindexphpTomatoTilling) All the availabletomato TILLING platforms including the Red Setterone utilise mutant collections generated in differentgenetic backgrounds and with different EMS doseswhich increase the chance of obtaining a larger spec-trum of alleles Thus it is of interest for the scientificcommunity to have different tomato TILLING resourcesfor the possibility of identifying a greater number ofmutations of interest
MethodsEMS mutagenesisTomato seeds (cv Red Setter) were treated with two dif-ferent concentrations (07 and 1) of the chemicalmutagen EMS (ethylmethane sulfonate) for 18 h at RTwith gentle shaking The seeds were then thoroughlywashed dried and sown in compost in 96 well seedtrays which allowed an accurate determination of germi-nation frequencyControl seeds those not exposed to EMS treatment
were treated in the same manner
Plant materialM2 seeds for the M2 seed production M1 plants weregrown according to standard tomato agronomic practiceand at the end of the fruit-ripening phase M2 seedswere collected from individual M1 plants and keptseparateM3 seeds 3 seeds belonging to each mutant M2 family
were sown in 96 well seed trays and the correspondingseedlings transplanted in open field M3 seeds were col-lected from single M2 plants
M2 plant phenotyping and data collection toolsPhenotype scoring was performed at different develop-mental stages from seed germination through fruit ripen-ing and seed harvest Each mutant candidate wascharacterized according to 17 classes and 51 subclasseswhich are reported in Table 2 The selection of classes andsubclasses was for the most part carried out on the basisof the phenotypic catalog reported by Menda et al [6]Data were collected using a hand-held Asus MyPal
730w while pictures were taken by using the NikonCoolpix 4500 digital camera
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 6 of 8
Database constructionThe phenotype database was developed using MySQL[43] as a relational database system
DNA extraction and sample poolingFor each M3 family the genomic DNA was extractedfrom four young leaves collected from four differentplants of the same family The leaf samples were col-lected in 96-well plates and the DNA was isolated byusing DNeasy 96 Plant Kit (Quiagen Hilden Ger-many) The quantification of extracted DNA was car-ried out on a 08 agarose gel using l DNA(Invitrogen Carlsbad CA USA) as a concentrationreference Genomic DNA samples were then dilutedtenfold and pooled eightfold to obtain the workingmaterial
PCR amplification mutation detection and validationPCR amplification was based on nested-PCR and wascarried out using two couples of target-specific primers4 ng of pooled genomic DNA was used for the firstPCR and forward-strand primers and reverse-strand pri-mers 5rsquo-end labelled with IRDye 700 and IRDye 800 dye(LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) respectively wereemployed for the second PCR [19]Mutation detection was performed as previously
described [38] Electrophoresis were performed on a LI-COR 4300 (LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) and gel imageswere analysed using Adobe Photoshop software (AdobeSystems Inc San Joseacute CA USA)After discovery mutations were validated by sequence
analysisThe mutation frequency for each amplicon was calcu-
lated as previously described [19] For the average muta-tion frequency we have summed the sizes of allamplicons and we have divided by the total number ofidentified mutants The data were multiplied for 075 inorder to eliminate the missing evaluation due to thepresence of one-fourth wild-type alleles in the 121Mendelian segregation in M3 generation [17]
Additional file 1 Nucleotide alignment Additional data file 1 is afigure showing a comparison analysis of a tilled 240 bp region ofExpansin1 gene This analysis shows that the identified induced pointmutations are not part of natural variabilityClick here for file[ httpwwwbiomedcentralcomcontentsupplementary1756-0500-3-69-S1DOC ]
AbbreviationsBLAST Basic Local Alignment Search Tool CODDLE Codons Optimized toDiscover Deleterious Lesions ctrl control EMS ethylmethane sulfonate LDLethal Dose NCBI National Center for Biotechnology Information RT RoomTemperature SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant TILLING TargetingInduced Local Lesions IN Genomes
AcknowledgementsThis work was mainly funded by the Italian Ministry of University andResearch (MIUR ITALYCO Project DD ndeg 603RIC) and by the Europeanproject EU-SOL (Contract number FOOD-CT-2006-016214) through the 6thframework programmeThis work was also supported by a Marie Curie fellowship The authors thankJJ Giovannoni for providing the Rin gene sequence and Stephan Summerefor reviewing the English The authors wish to thank all colleagues ofMetapontum Agrobios for helping through all phases of the project
Author details1Metapontum Agrobios SS Jonica 106 Km 4482 75010 Metaponto (MT)Italy 2Uniteacute de Recherche en Geacutenomique Veacutegeacutetale UMR INRA-CNRS RueGaston Creacutemieux 91057 Evry Cedex France 3ENEA Casaccia ResearchCenter PO Box 2400 Roma 00100AD Italy
Authorsrsquo contributionsFCa planned and headed the development of the mutant populations APand GS took care and visually phenotyped the mutant populations OD setup the LycoTILL database SM extracted the DNA SM FP and GM didTILLING screens and analysis AB supervised the TILLING platform set up inEvry FCe and FCa co-directed the TILLING project in M Agrobios FCa andSM were responsible for drafting and revising the manuscript withcontributions from co-authorsAll authors read and approved the final manuscript
Competing interestsThe authors declare that they have no competing interests
Received 28 January 2010 Accepted 12 March 2010Published 12 March 2010
References1 Tomato Functional Genomics Database [httptedbticornelledu]2 Fei Z Tang X Alba RM White JA Ronning CM Martin GB Tanksley SD
Giovannoni JJ Comprehensive EST analysis of tomato and comparativegenomics of fruit ripening Plant J 2004 40(1)47-59
3 Chiusano ML DrsquoAgostino N Traini A Licciardiello C Raimondo EAversano M Frusciante L Monti L ISOL an Italian SOLAnaceaegenomics resource BMC Bioinformatics 2007 9(Suppl)S7
4 Moco S Bino RJ Vorst O Verhoeven HA de Groot J van Beek TAVervoort J de Vos CH A liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based metabolome database for tomato Plant Physiol 2006141(4)1205-1218
5 TGRC Tomato Genetic Resourse Center [httptgrcucdavisedu]6 Menda N Semel Y Peled D Eshed Y Zamir D In silico screening of a
saturated mutation library of tomato Plant Journal 2004 38861-8727 Watanabe S Mizoguchi T Aoki K Kubo Y Mori H Imanishi S Yamazaki Y
Shibata D Ezura H Ethylmethansulfonate (EMS) mutagenesis of Solanumlycopersicon cv Micro-Tom for large-scale mutant screens PlantBiotechnololy 2007 2433-38
8 Analysis of the genome sequence of the flowering plant Arabidopsisthaliana Nature 2000 408(6814)796-815
9 The map-based sequence of the rice genome Nature 2005436(7052)793-800
10 Jaillon O Aury JM Noel B Policriti A Clepet C Casagrande A Choisne NAubourg S Vitulo N Jubin C et al The grapevine genome sequencesuggests ancestral hexaploidization in major angiosperm phyla Nature2007 449(7161)463-467
11 International Tomato Genome Sequencing Project [httpwwwsgncornelleduabouttomato_sequencingpl]
12 Mathews H Clendennen SK Caldwell CG Liu XL Connors K Matheis NSchuster DK Menasco DJ Wagoner W Lightner J et al Activation taggingin tomato identifies a transcriptional regulator of anthocyaninbiosynthesis modification and transport Plant Cell 2003 15(8)1689-1703
13 Cooley MB Goldsbrough AP Still DW Yoder JI Site-selected insertionalmutagenesis of tomato with maize Ac and Ds elements Mol Gen Genet1996 252(1-2)184-194
14 McCallum CM Comai L Greene EA Henikoff S Targeting Induced LocalLesions IN Genomes (TILLING) for plant functional genomics PlantPhysiol 2000 123(2)439-442
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 7 of 8
15 Colbert T Till BJ Tompa R Reynolds SH Steine MN Yeung ATMcCallum CM Comai L Henikoff S High-throughput screening forinduced point mutations Plant Physiol 2001 126480-484
16 Till BJ Colbert T Codomo C Enns L Johnson J Reynolds SH Henikoff JGGreene EA Steine MN Comai L et al High-throughput TILLING forArabidopsis Methods Mol Biol 2006 323127-135
17 Greene EA Codomo CA Taylor NE Henikoff JG Till BJ Reynolds SHEnns LC Burtner C Johnson JE Odden AR et al Spectrum of chemicallyinduced mutations from a large-scale reverse-genetic screen inArabidopsis Genetics 2003 164(2)731-740
18 Martin B Ramiro M Martinez-Zapater JM Alonso-Blanco C A high-densitycollection of EMS-induced mutations for TILLING in Landsberg erectagenetic background of Arabidopsis BMC Plant Biol 2009 9147
19 Dalmais M Schmidt J Le Signor C Moussy F Burstin J Savois V Aubert GBrunaud V de Oliveira Y Guichard C et al UTILLdb a Pisum sativum insilico forward and reverse genetics tool Genome Biol 2008 9(2)R43
20 Slade AJ Fuerstenberg SI Loeffler D Steine MN Facciotti D A reversegenetic nontransgenic approach to wheat crop improvement byTILLING Nat Biotechnol 2005 23(1)75-81
21 Till BJ Cooper J Tai TH Colowit P Greene EA Henikoff S Comai LDiscovery of chemically induced mutations in rice by TILLING BMC PlantBiol 2007 719
22 Wu JL Wu C Lei C Baraoidan M Bordeos A Madamba MR Ramos-Pamplona M Mauleon R Portugal A Ulat VJ et al Chemical- andirradiation-induced mutants of indica rice IR64 for forward and reversegenetics Plant Mol Biol 2005 59(1)85-97
23 Caldwell DG McCallum N Shaw P Muehlbauer GJ Marshall DF Waugh RA structured mutant population for forward and reverse genetics inBarley (Hordeum vulgare L) Plant Journal 2004 40143-150
24 Till BJ Reynolds SH Weil C Springer N Burtner C Young K Bowers ECodomo CA Enns LC Odden AR et al Discovery of induced pointmutations in maize genes by TILLING BMC Plant Biol 2004 412
25 Cooper JL Till BJ Laport RG Darlow MC Kleffner JM Jamai A El-Mellouki TLiu S Ritchie R Nielsen N et al TILLING to detect induced mutations insoybean BMC Plant Biol 2008 89
26 Perry JA Wang TL Welham TJ Gardner S Pike JM Yoshida S Parniske MA TILLING reverse genetics tool and a web-accessible collection ofmutants of the legume Lotus japonicus Plant Physiol 2003131(3)866-871
27 Xin Z Wang ML Barkley NA Burow G Franks C Pederson G Burke JApplying genotyping (TILLING) and phenotyping analyses to elucidategene function in a chemically induced sorghum mutant populationBMC Plant Biol 2008 8103
28 Rigola D van Oeveren J Janssen A Bonne A Schneiders H Poel van derHJ van Orsouw NJ Hogers RC de Both MT van Eijk MJ High-throughputdetection of induced mutations and natural variation using KeyPointtechnology PLoS One 2009 4(3)e4761
29 Gady AL Hermans FW Wal Van de MH van Loo EN Visser RG Bachem CWImplementation of two high through-put techniques in a novelapplication detecting point mutations in large EMS mutated plantpopulations Plant Methods 2009 513
30 Moens CB Donn TM Wolf-Saxon ER Ma TP Reverse genetics in zebrafishby TILLING Brief Funct Genomic Proteomic 2008 7(6)454-459
31 Winkler S Schwabedissen A Backasch D Bokel C Seidel C Bonisch SFurthauer M Kuhrs A Cobreros L Brand M et al Target-selected mutantscreen by TILLING in Drosophila Genome Res 2005 15(5)718-723
32 Matilla AJ Ethylene in seed formation and germination Seed ScienceResearch 2000 10111-126
33 Kucera B Cohn MA Leubner-Metzger G Plant hormone interactionsduring seed dormancy release and germination Seed Science Research2005 15281-307
34 LycoTILL Tomato Mutant DB [httpwwwagrobiosittillingindexhtml]35 Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LC Johnson JE
Burtner C Odden AR Young K Taylor NE et al Large-scale discovery ofinduced point mutations with high-throughput TILLING Genome Res2003 13(3)524-530
36 CODDLE Codons Optimized to Discover DeleteriousLEsions [httpwwwproweborgcoddle]
37 Rozen S H S Primer3 on the WWW for general users and for biologistprogrammers Bioinformatics Methods and Protocols Methods in MolecularBiology Totowa NJ Humana PressKrawetz SA Misener S 1999 365-386
38 Triques K Sturbois B Gallais S Dalmais M Chauvin S Clepet C Aubourg SRameau C Caboche M Bendahmane A Characterization of Arabidopsisthaliana mismatch specific endonucleases application to mutationdiscovery by TILLING in pea Plant J 2007 51(6)1116-1125
39 SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant [httpblocksfhcrcorgsiftSIFThtml]
40 Ng PC Henikoff S SIFT Predicting amino acid changes that affectprotein function Nucleic Acids Res 2003 31(13)3812-3814
41 Sega GA A review of the genetic effects of ethyl methanesulfonateMutat Res 1984 134113-142
42 Comai L Young K Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LCJohnson JE Burtner C Odden AR et al Efficient discovery of DNApolymorphisms in natural populations by Ecotilling Plant J 200437(5)778-786
43 MySQL [httpwwwmysqlcom]
doi1011861756-0500-3-69Cite this article as Minoia et al A new mutant genetic resource fortomato crop improvement by TILLING technology BMC Research Notes2010 369
Submit your next manuscript to BioMed Centraland take full advantage of
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Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 8 of 8
Figure 1 Examples of tomato mutant phenotypes Mutations affecting a) fruit morphology b) fruit colour c) plant habit d) leaf morphologye) cotyledon number f) flower morphology g) plant habit h) inflorescence structure
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 4 of 8
We calculated the mutation density in the seven tar-geted genes (Table 3) according to Dalmais et al [19]and Greene et al [17] We estimated the mutation den-sity at 1 mutation322 kb in the 1 EMS and 1 muta-tion574 kb in the 07 EMS Red Setter population
DiscussionThe optimization of mutagenesis is a critical parameterin establishing a good mutant collection for forward andreverse genetic studies In order to balance maximummutation density with an acceptable plant survival ratewe decided to utilise two different doses of EMS 07and 1 A strict correlation was observed between theEMS doses and the toxicity the mutation densityobtained and the frequency of phenotype alterations At1 EMS the plant fertility rate was 41 less than theplant treated with 07 In contrast the 1 EMS yielded178 fold more mutations per genome than 07 treatedplant At the phenotype level 60 of the mutant pheno-types scored in the M2 generation were derived fromthe 1 EMS treated seedsIn the TILLING screens we analysed seven genes and
discovered a total of 66 induced point mutations Thespectrum of expected mutations in an EMS-treated popu-lation is essentially GCAT transition because of the fre-quent alkylation of guanine residues by EMS [41] InArabidopsis maize wheat and pea more than 99 ofidentified mutations are GCAT transition [17192024]In our mutant Red Setter populations the percentage ofobserved GCAT transition was 60 in the 07 EMSpopulation and only 286 in the 1 EMS population Wealso identified GCTA ATTA ATCG GCCG and ATGC transversions (Table 4) The spectrum of observednucleotide changes in the 07 EMS-treated tomato popu-lation is similar to the spectrum of mutations observed inthe reverse TILLING screens of rice and barley for whichtransitions in the range of 70 are reported [2123] Incontrast the mutational spectrum of the 1 EMS popula-tion is different (ATCG GCCG see Table 4)
In order to rule out the probability that natural poly-morphisms introduced through pollen or seed contami-nation could be responsible for the non-GCATchanges observed in our mutant populations we ana-lysed the natural sequence variation of the tilled genesusing BLAST analysis [Additional file 1 SupplementalFigure S1] and EcoTILLING [42] of 150 tomato varietiesamong which 45 were Italian varieties (unpublisheddata) These analyses revealed that the nucleotidechanges identified by TILLING were present neither inthe available gene bank sequences nor in the screenedtomato varieties Based on this we concluded that thenon-GCAT changes discovered in the TILLING screensdo not result from cross pollination but are newallelic variants generated by the mutagen action Thisconclusion is also consistent with the non recovery ofnon-GCAT changes in multiple genes in the same indi-vidual as reported for the Seattle Arabidopsis popula-tion where rare contaminants were observed tointroduce polymorphisms in more than one gene in thesame plant [17]Based on this we speculate that tomato might differ
from other plant species in its mutagenic response toEMS doses Moreover we think that the choice of
Table 3 Mutation density in 07 EMS and 1 EMS Red Setter populations
Target gene No of screened M3 families No of identified mutations Overall mutation density
Name Amplicon size (kb) 07 EMS 1 EMS 07 EMS 1 EMS 07 EMS 1 EMS
Rab11a 0407 1373 713 1 3 1559 kb 197 kb
PG 2587 2791 963 7 2 11031 kb 11246 kb
Exp1 1025 3885 1284 14 6 1284 kb 1219 kb
RIN 1331 3885 1284 4 8 11293 kb 1214 kb
Gr 1409 3885 1284 5 3 11095 kb 1603 kb
Lcy-b 1274 3801 1252 4 3 11211 kb 1532 kb
Lcy-e 1414 3630 1185 6 0 1855 kb -
Totalmean 9447 41 25 1574 kb 1322 kb
The accession numbers of the analyzed seven target genes are the following Rab11a [GenBankAJ245570] PG [GenBankM37304] Exp1 [GenBankAF548376] RIN[GenBankAF448522] Gr [GenBankDQ372897] Lcy-b [GenBankCQ788383] Lcy-e [GenBankY14387] The number of screened M3 families the number of identifiedmutations and the overall mutation density estimated as described in Methods are reported both for 07 and 1 EMS Red Setter populations
Table 4 Spectrum of mutations identified in Red Setterpopulations and their comparison to other organisms
Mutation Tomato Red Setter Barley [23] Rice [21]
Type Change 07 EMS 1 EMS
Transition GCAT 600 286 700 700
Transversion GCTA 67 143 100 40
ATTA 200 143 100 150
ATGC 133 143 100 110
ATCG 0 143 0 0
GCCG 0 143 0 0
Total () 100 100 100 100
Distribution of the identified mutations in the different classes of nucleotidechanges In addition to the Red Setter mutant population data reported aspercentage values the mutation spectrum of barley and rice are also shown
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 5 of 8
ENDO1 enzyme was fundamental in the detection of alltypes of changes that we observed in our mutant popu-lations For its high specificity in recognizing mis-matches at the same rate [38] we could identifymutations never found in other plant species and with ahigher frequencyThe TILLING screening performed on seven tomato
genes permitted the calculation of the mutation densityin the two mutant Red Setter populations We estimatedthe mutation density at 1 mutation322 kb in the 1EMS and 1 mutation574 kb in the 07 EMS Red Set-ter population The mutation densities calculated in the1 and 07 EMS Red Setter populations are 23 and12 times respectively higher than one mutation every737 kb reported by Gady et al[29] in the 1 EMSTPAADASU tomato populationThis comparison demonstrate that our populations have
a higher number of mutations respect to those so far avail-able and published for tomato The high mutation densityof our populations especially for the 1 EMS oneincreases the size of allelic series that can be obtain andreduces the population size that needs to be screenedComparing the mutation densities estimated in the 1
and 07 EMS Red Setter populations with thosedescribed in other plant species results that they are 19and 34 times respectively lower than one mutation per170 kb reported previously for Arabidopsis [17] buttheir average (1448 kb) is similar to those reported formaize (1500 kb) [24] and rice (1500 kb) [22] and 22fold higher than one mutation per Mb found in barleyby Caldwell et al [23]So far higher mutation densities were observed only in
tetraploid wheat (140 kb) and hexaploid wheat (124kb) [20] Itrsquos likely that the polyploidy nature of theirgenomes helps in withstanding the mutagen action andconsequently higher mutation frequencies can beobtainedA mutant population is considered saturated with at
least a single ldquohitrdquo in every gene [6] In the Red SetterTILLING platform more than one mutation was identi-fied per gene analysed We can therefore conclude thatour mutant populations are sufficiently saturatedFurthermore by comparing other plant species used inpublic TILLING projects we can also affirm that ourpopulations are suitable for use in high-throughputmutation discovery
ConclusionsWe have developed a new genetic resource in thetomato Red Setter genetic background by means ofEMS mutagenesis The mutant collection is organized assuch that it could be used for both forward (EMS satu-rated mutant collection and the associated phenotypicdatabase) and reverse (high-throughput TILLING
platform) genetics in tomato for both basic science orcrop improvementThe Red Setter TILLING platform is open to the
scientific community to request TILLING screenings ingenes of interest and to obtain materialThese services can be requested via database that also
serves as portal for user need In addition to our plat-form at present other tomato TILLING platforms arepublicly accessible via web for requesting TILLING ser-vices (httpurgvevryinrafrUTILLdb and httptillingucdaviseduindexphpTomatoTilling) All the availabletomato TILLING platforms including the Red Setterone utilise mutant collections generated in differentgenetic backgrounds and with different EMS doseswhich increase the chance of obtaining a larger spec-trum of alleles Thus it is of interest for the scientificcommunity to have different tomato TILLING resourcesfor the possibility of identifying a greater number ofmutations of interest
MethodsEMS mutagenesisTomato seeds (cv Red Setter) were treated with two dif-ferent concentrations (07 and 1) of the chemicalmutagen EMS (ethylmethane sulfonate) for 18 h at RTwith gentle shaking The seeds were then thoroughlywashed dried and sown in compost in 96 well seedtrays which allowed an accurate determination of germi-nation frequencyControl seeds those not exposed to EMS treatment
were treated in the same manner
Plant materialM2 seeds for the M2 seed production M1 plants weregrown according to standard tomato agronomic practiceand at the end of the fruit-ripening phase M2 seedswere collected from individual M1 plants and keptseparateM3 seeds 3 seeds belonging to each mutant M2 family
were sown in 96 well seed trays and the correspondingseedlings transplanted in open field M3 seeds were col-lected from single M2 plants
M2 plant phenotyping and data collection toolsPhenotype scoring was performed at different develop-mental stages from seed germination through fruit ripen-ing and seed harvest Each mutant candidate wascharacterized according to 17 classes and 51 subclasseswhich are reported in Table 2 The selection of classes andsubclasses was for the most part carried out on the basisof the phenotypic catalog reported by Menda et al [6]Data were collected using a hand-held Asus MyPal
730w while pictures were taken by using the NikonCoolpix 4500 digital camera
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 6 of 8
Database constructionThe phenotype database was developed using MySQL[43] as a relational database system
DNA extraction and sample poolingFor each M3 family the genomic DNA was extractedfrom four young leaves collected from four differentplants of the same family The leaf samples were col-lected in 96-well plates and the DNA was isolated byusing DNeasy 96 Plant Kit (Quiagen Hilden Ger-many) The quantification of extracted DNA was car-ried out on a 08 agarose gel using l DNA(Invitrogen Carlsbad CA USA) as a concentrationreference Genomic DNA samples were then dilutedtenfold and pooled eightfold to obtain the workingmaterial
PCR amplification mutation detection and validationPCR amplification was based on nested-PCR and wascarried out using two couples of target-specific primers4 ng of pooled genomic DNA was used for the firstPCR and forward-strand primers and reverse-strand pri-mers 5rsquo-end labelled with IRDye 700 and IRDye 800 dye(LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) respectively wereemployed for the second PCR [19]Mutation detection was performed as previously
described [38] Electrophoresis were performed on a LI-COR 4300 (LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) and gel imageswere analysed using Adobe Photoshop software (AdobeSystems Inc San Joseacute CA USA)After discovery mutations were validated by sequence
analysisThe mutation frequency for each amplicon was calcu-
lated as previously described [19] For the average muta-tion frequency we have summed the sizes of allamplicons and we have divided by the total number ofidentified mutants The data were multiplied for 075 inorder to eliminate the missing evaluation due to thepresence of one-fourth wild-type alleles in the 121Mendelian segregation in M3 generation [17]
Additional file 1 Nucleotide alignment Additional data file 1 is afigure showing a comparison analysis of a tilled 240 bp region ofExpansin1 gene This analysis shows that the identified induced pointmutations are not part of natural variabilityClick here for file[ httpwwwbiomedcentralcomcontentsupplementary1756-0500-3-69-S1DOC ]
AbbreviationsBLAST Basic Local Alignment Search Tool CODDLE Codons Optimized toDiscover Deleterious Lesions ctrl control EMS ethylmethane sulfonate LDLethal Dose NCBI National Center for Biotechnology Information RT RoomTemperature SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant TILLING TargetingInduced Local Lesions IN Genomes
AcknowledgementsThis work was mainly funded by the Italian Ministry of University andResearch (MIUR ITALYCO Project DD ndeg 603RIC) and by the Europeanproject EU-SOL (Contract number FOOD-CT-2006-016214) through the 6thframework programmeThis work was also supported by a Marie Curie fellowship The authors thankJJ Giovannoni for providing the Rin gene sequence and Stephan Summerefor reviewing the English The authors wish to thank all colleagues ofMetapontum Agrobios for helping through all phases of the project
Author details1Metapontum Agrobios SS Jonica 106 Km 4482 75010 Metaponto (MT)Italy 2Uniteacute de Recherche en Geacutenomique Veacutegeacutetale UMR INRA-CNRS RueGaston Creacutemieux 91057 Evry Cedex France 3ENEA Casaccia ResearchCenter PO Box 2400 Roma 00100AD Italy
Authorsrsquo contributionsFCa planned and headed the development of the mutant populations APand GS took care and visually phenotyped the mutant populations OD setup the LycoTILL database SM extracted the DNA SM FP and GM didTILLING screens and analysis AB supervised the TILLING platform set up inEvry FCe and FCa co-directed the TILLING project in M Agrobios FCa andSM were responsible for drafting and revising the manuscript withcontributions from co-authorsAll authors read and approved the final manuscript
Competing interestsThe authors declare that they have no competing interests
Received 28 January 2010 Accepted 12 March 2010Published 12 March 2010
References1 Tomato Functional Genomics Database [httptedbticornelledu]2 Fei Z Tang X Alba RM White JA Ronning CM Martin GB Tanksley SD
Giovannoni JJ Comprehensive EST analysis of tomato and comparativegenomics of fruit ripening Plant J 2004 40(1)47-59
3 Chiusano ML DrsquoAgostino N Traini A Licciardiello C Raimondo EAversano M Frusciante L Monti L ISOL an Italian SOLAnaceaegenomics resource BMC Bioinformatics 2007 9(Suppl)S7
4 Moco S Bino RJ Vorst O Verhoeven HA de Groot J van Beek TAVervoort J de Vos CH A liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based metabolome database for tomato Plant Physiol 2006141(4)1205-1218
5 TGRC Tomato Genetic Resourse Center [httptgrcucdavisedu]6 Menda N Semel Y Peled D Eshed Y Zamir D In silico screening of a
saturated mutation library of tomato Plant Journal 2004 38861-8727 Watanabe S Mizoguchi T Aoki K Kubo Y Mori H Imanishi S Yamazaki Y
Shibata D Ezura H Ethylmethansulfonate (EMS) mutagenesis of Solanumlycopersicon cv Micro-Tom for large-scale mutant screens PlantBiotechnololy 2007 2433-38
8 Analysis of the genome sequence of the flowering plant Arabidopsisthaliana Nature 2000 408(6814)796-815
9 The map-based sequence of the rice genome Nature 2005436(7052)793-800
10 Jaillon O Aury JM Noel B Policriti A Clepet C Casagrande A Choisne NAubourg S Vitulo N Jubin C et al The grapevine genome sequencesuggests ancestral hexaploidization in major angiosperm phyla Nature2007 449(7161)463-467
11 International Tomato Genome Sequencing Project [httpwwwsgncornelleduabouttomato_sequencingpl]
12 Mathews H Clendennen SK Caldwell CG Liu XL Connors K Matheis NSchuster DK Menasco DJ Wagoner W Lightner J et al Activation taggingin tomato identifies a transcriptional regulator of anthocyaninbiosynthesis modification and transport Plant Cell 2003 15(8)1689-1703
13 Cooley MB Goldsbrough AP Still DW Yoder JI Site-selected insertionalmutagenesis of tomato with maize Ac and Ds elements Mol Gen Genet1996 252(1-2)184-194
14 McCallum CM Comai L Greene EA Henikoff S Targeting Induced LocalLesions IN Genomes (TILLING) for plant functional genomics PlantPhysiol 2000 123(2)439-442
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 7 of 8
15 Colbert T Till BJ Tompa R Reynolds SH Steine MN Yeung ATMcCallum CM Comai L Henikoff S High-throughput screening forinduced point mutations Plant Physiol 2001 126480-484
16 Till BJ Colbert T Codomo C Enns L Johnson J Reynolds SH Henikoff JGGreene EA Steine MN Comai L et al High-throughput TILLING forArabidopsis Methods Mol Biol 2006 323127-135
17 Greene EA Codomo CA Taylor NE Henikoff JG Till BJ Reynolds SHEnns LC Burtner C Johnson JE Odden AR et al Spectrum of chemicallyinduced mutations from a large-scale reverse-genetic screen inArabidopsis Genetics 2003 164(2)731-740
18 Martin B Ramiro M Martinez-Zapater JM Alonso-Blanco C A high-densitycollection of EMS-induced mutations for TILLING in Landsberg erectagenetic background of Arabidopsis BMC Plant Biol 2009 9147
19 Dalmais M Schmidt J Le Signor C Moussy F Burstin J Savois V Aubert GBrunaud V de Oliveira Y Guichard C et al UTILLdb a Pisum sativum insilico forward and reverse genetics tool Genome Biol 2008 9(2)R43
20 Slade AJ Fuerstenberg SI Loeffler D Steine MN Facciotti D A reversegenetic nontransgenic approach to wheat crop improvement byTILLING Nat Biotechnol 2005 23(1)75-81
21 Till BJ Cooper J Tai TH Colowit P Greene EA Henikoff S Comai LDiscovery of chemically induced mutations in rice by TILLING BMC PlantBiol 2007 719
22 Wu JL Wu C Lei C Baraoidan M Bordeos A Madamba MR Ramos-Pamplona M Mauleon R Portugal A Ulat VJ et al Chemical- andirradiation-induced mutants of indica rice IR64 for forward and reversegenetics Plant Mol Biol 2005 59(1)85-97
23 Caldwell DG McCallum N Shaw P Muehlbauer GJ Marshall DF Waugh RA structured mutant population for forward and reverse genetics inBarley (Hordeum vulgare L) Plant Journal 2004 40143-150
24 Till BJ Reynolds SH Weil C Springer N Burtner C Young K Bowers ECodomo CA Enns LC Odden AR et al Discovery of induced pointmutations in maize genes by TILLING BMC Plant Biol 2004 412
25 Cooper JL Till BJ Laport RG Darlow MC Kleffner JM Jamai A El-Mellouki TLiu S Ritchie R Nielsen N et al TILLING to detect induced mutations insoybean BMC Plant Biol 2008 89
26 Perry JA Wang TL Welham TJ Gardner S Pike JM Yoshida S Parniske MA TILLING reverse genetics tool and a web-accessible collection ofmutants of the legume Lotus japonicus Plant Physiol 2003131(3)866-871
27 Xin Z Wang ML Barkley NA Burow G Franks C Pederson G Burke JApplying genotyping (TILLING) and phenotyping analyses to elucidategene function in a chemically induced sorghum mutant populationBMC Plant Biol 2008 8103
28 Rigola D van Oeveren J Janssen A Bonne A Schneiders H Poel van derHJ van Orsouw NJ Hogers RC de Both MT van Eijk MJ High-throughputdetection of induced mutations and natural variation using KeyPointtechnology PLoS One 2009 4(3)e4761
29 Gady AL Hermans FW Wal Van de MH van Loo EN Visser RG Bachem CWImplementation of two high through-put techniques in a novelapplication detecting point mutations in large EMS mutated plantpopulations Plant Methods 2009 513
30 Moens CB Donn TM Wolf-Saxon ER Ma TP Reverse genetics in zebrafishby TILLING Brief Funct Genomic Proteomic 2008 7(6)454-459
31 Winkler S Schwabedissen A Backasch D Bokel C Seidel C Bonisch SFurthauer M Kuhrs A Cobreros L Brand M et al Target-selected mutantscreen by TILLING in Drosophila Genome Res 2005 15(5)718-723
32 Matilla AJ Ethylene in seed formation and germination Seed ScienceResearch 2000 10111-126
33 Kucera B Cohn MA Leubner-Metzger G Plant hormone interactionsduring seed dormancy release and germination Seed Science Research2005 15281-307
34 LycoTILL Tomato Mutant DB [httpwwwagrobiosittillingindexhtml]35 Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LC Johnson JE
Burtner C Odden AR Young K Taylor NE et al Large-scale discovery ofinduced point mutations with high-throughput TILLING Genome Res2003 13(3)524-530
36 CODDLE Codons Optimized to Discover DeleteriousLEsions [httpwwwproweborgcoddle]
37 Rozen S H S Primer3 on the WWW for general users and for biologistprogrammers Bioinformatics Methods and Protocols Methods in MolecularBiology Totowa NJ Humana PressKrawetz SA Misener S 1999 365-386
38 Triques K Sturbois B Gallais S Dalmais M Chauvin S Clepet C Aubourg SRameau C Caboche M Bendahmane A Characterization of Arabidopsisthaliana mismatch specific endonucleases application to mutationdiscovery by TILLING in pea Plant J 2007 51(6)1116-1125
39 SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant [httpblocksfhcrcorgsiftSIFThtml]
40 Ng PC Henikoff S SIFT Predicting amino acid changes that affectprotein function Nucleic Acids Res 2003 31(13)3812-3814
41 Sega GA A review of the genetic effects of ethyl methanesulfonateMutat Res 1984 134113-142
42 Comai L Young K Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LCJohnson JE Burtner C Odden AR et al Efficient discovery of DNApolymorphisms in natural populations by Ecotilling Plant J 200437(5)778-786
43 MySQL [httpwwwmysqlcom]
doi1011861756-0500-3-69Cite this article as Minoia et al A new mutant genetic resource fortomato crop improvement by TILLING technology BMC Research Notes2010 369
Submit your next manuscript to BioMed Centraland take full advantage of
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Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 8 of 8
We calculated the mutation density in the seven tar-geted genes (Table 3) according to Dalmais et al [19]and Greene et al [17] We estimated the mutation den-sity at 1 mutation322 kb in the 1 EMS and 1 muta-tion574 kb in the 07 EMS Red Setter population
DiscussionThe optimization of mutagenesis is a critical parameterin establishing a good mutant collection for forward andreverse genetic studies In order to balance maximummutation density with an acceptable plant survival ratewe decided to utilise two different doses of EMS 07and 1 A strict correlation was observed between theEMS doses and the toxicity the mutation densityobtained and the frequency of phenotype alterations At1 EMS the plant fertility rate was 41 less than theplant treated with 07 In contrast the 1 EMS yielded178 fold more mutations per genome than 07 treatedplant At the phenotype level 60 of the mutant pheno-types scored in the M2 generation were derived fromthe 1 EMS treated seedsIn the TILLING screens we analysed seven genes and
discovered a total of 66 induced point mutations Thespectrum of expected mutations in an EMS-treated popu-lation is essentially GCAT transition because of the fre-quent alkylation of guanine residues by EMS [41] InArabidopsis maize wheat and pea more than 99 ofidentified mutations are GCAT transition [17192024]In our mutant Red Setter populations the percentage ofobserved GCAT transition was 60 in the 07 EMSpopulation and only 286 in the 1 EMS population Wealso identified GCTA ATTA ATCG GCCG and ATGC transversions (Table 4) The spectrum of observednucleotide changes in the 07 EMS-treated tomato popu-lation is similar to the spectrum of mutations observed inthe reverse TILLING screens of rice and barley for whichtransitions in the range of 70 are reported [2123] Incontrast the mutational spectrum of the 1 EMS popula-tion is different (ATCG GCCG see Table 4)
In order to rule out the probability that natural poly-morphisms introduced through pollen or seed contami-nation could be responsible for the non-GCATchanges observed in our mutant populations we ana-lysed the natural sequence variation of the tilled genesusing BLAST analysis [Additional file 1 SupplementalFigure S1] and EcoTILLING [42] of 150 tomato varietiesamong which 45 were Italian varieties (unpublisheddata) These analyses revealed that the nucleotidechanges identified by TILLING were present neither inthe available gene bank sequences nor in the screenedtomato varieties Based on this we concluded that thenon-GCAT changes discovered in the TILLING screensdo not result from cross pollination but are newallelic variants generated by the mutagen action Thisconclusion is also consistent with the non recovery ofnon-GCAT changes in multiple genes in the same indi-vidual as reported for the Seattle Arabidopsis popula-tion where rare contaminants were observed tointroduce polymorphisms in more than one gene in thesame plant [17]Based on this we speculate that tomato might differ
from other plant species in its mutagenic response toEMS doses Moreover we think that the choice of
Table 3 Mutation density in 07 EMS and 1 EMS Red Setter populations
Target gene No of screened M3 families No of identified mutations Overall mutation density
Name Amplicon size (kb) 07 EMS 1 EMS 07 EMS 1 EMS 07 EMS 1 EMS
Rab11a 0407 1373 713 1 3 1559 kb 197 kb
PG 2587 2791 963 7 2 11031 kb 11246 kb
Exp1 1025 3885 1284 14 6 1284 kb 1219 kb
RIN 1331 3885 1284 4 8 11293 kb 1214 kb
Gr 1409 3885 1284 5 3 11095 kb 1603 kb
Lcy-b 1274 3801 1252 4 3 11211 kb 1532 kb
Lcy-e 1414 3630 1185 6 0 1855 kb -
Totalmean 9447 41 25 1574 kb 1322 kb
The accession numbers of the analyzed seven target genes are the following Rab11a [GenBankAJ245570] PG [GenBankM37304] Exp1 [GenBankAF548376] RIN[GenBankAF448522] Gr [GenBankDQ372897] Lcy-b [GenBankCQ788383] Lcy-e [GenBankY14387] The number of screened M3 families the number of identifiedmutations and the overall mutation density estimated as described in Methods are reported both for 07 and 1 EMS Red Setter populations
Table 4 Spectrum of mutations identified in Red Setterpopulations and their comparison to other organisms
Mutation Tomato Red Setter Barley [23] Rice [21]
Type Change 07 EMS 1 EMS
Transition GCAT 600 286 700 700
Transversion GCTA 67 143 100 40
ATTA 200 143 100 150
ATGC 133 143 100 110
ATCG 0 143 0 0
GCCG 0 143 0 0
Total () 100 100 100 100
Distribution of the identified mutations in the different classes of nucleotidechanges In addition to the Red Setter mutant population data reported aspercentage values the mutation spectrum of barley and rice are also shown
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 5 of 8
ENDO1 enzyme was fundamental in the detection of alltypes of changes that we observed in our mutant popu-lations For its high specificity in recognizing mis-matches at the same rate [38] we could identifymutations never found in other plant species and with ahigher frequencyThe TILLING screening performed on seven tomato
genes permitted the calculation of the mutation densityin the two mutant Red Setter populations We estimatedthe mutation density at 1 mutation322 kb in the 1EMS and 1 mutation574 kb in the 07 EMS Red Set-ter population The mutation densities calculated in the1 and 07 EMS Red Setter populations are 23 and12 times respectively higher than one mutation every737 kb reported by Gady et al[29] in the 1 EMSTPAADASU tomato populationThis comparison demonstrate that our populations have
a higher number of mutations respect to those so far avail-able and published for tomato The high mutation densityof our populations especially for the 1 EMS oneincreases the size of allelic series that can be obtain andreduces the population size that needs to be screenedComparing the mutation densities estimated in the 1
and 07 EMS Red Setter populations with thosedescribed in other plant species results that they are 19and 34 times respectively lower than one mutation per170 kb reported previously for Arabidopsis [17] buttheir average (1448 kb) is similar to those reported formaize (1500 kb) [24] and rice (1500 kb) [22] and 22fold higher than one mutation per Mb found in barleyby Caldwell et al [23]So far higher mutation densities were observed only in
tetraploid wheat (140 kb) and hexaploid wheat (124kb) [20] Itrsquos likely that the polyploidy nature of theirgenomes helps in withstanding the mutagen action andconsequently higher mutation frequencies can beobtainedA mutant population is considered saturated with at
least a single ldquohitrdquo in every gene [6] In the Red SetterTILLING platform more than one mutation was identi-fied per gene analysed We can therefore conclude thatour mutant populations are sufficiently saturatedFurthermore by comparing other plant species used inpublic TILLING projects we can also affirm that ourpopulations are suitable for use in high-throughputmutation discovery
ConclusionsWe have developed a new genetic resource in thetomato Red Setter genetic background by means ofEMS mutagenesis The mutant collection is organized assuch that it could be used for both forward (EMS satu-rated mutant collection and the associated phenotypicdatabase) and reverse (high-throughput TILLING
platform) genetics in tomato for both basic science orcrop improvementThe Red Setter TILLING platform is open to the
scientific community to request TILLING screenings ingenes of interest and to obtain materialThese services can be requested via database that also
serves as portal for user need In addition to our plat-form at present other tomato TILLING platforms arepublicly accessible via web for requesting TILLING ser-vices (httpurgvevryinrafrUTILLdb and httptillingucdaviseduindexphpTomatoTilling) All the availabletomato TILLING platforms including the Red Setterone utilise mutant collections generated in differentgenetic backgrounds and with different EMS doseswhich increase the chance of obtaining a larger spec-trum of alleles Thus it is of interest for the scientificcommunity to have different tomato TILLING resourcesfor the possibility of identifying a greater number ofmutations of interest
MethodsEMS mutagenesisTomato seeds (cv Red Setter) were treated with two dif-ferent concentrations (07 and 1) of the chemicalmutagen EMS (ethylmethane sulfonate) for 18 h at RTwith gentle shaking The seeds were then thoroughlywashed dried and sown in compost in 96 well seedtrays which allowed an accurate determination of germi-nation frequencyControl seeds those not exposed to EMS treatment
were treated in the same manner
Plant materialM2 seeds for the M2 seed production M1 plants weregrown according to standard tomato agronomic practiceand at the end of the fruit-ripening phase M2 seedswere collected from individual M1 plants and keptseparateM3 seeds 3 seeds belonging to each mutant M2 family
were sown in 96 well seed trays and the correspondingseedlings transplanted in open field M3 seeds were col-lected from single M2 plants
M2 plant phenotyping and data collection toolsPhenotype scoring was performed at different develop-mental stages from seed germination through fruit ripen-ing and seed harvest Each mutant candidate wascharacterized according to 17 classes and 51 subclasseswhich are reported in Table 2 The selection of classes andsubclasses was for the most part carried out on the basisof the phenotypic catalog reported by Menda et al [6]Data were collected using a hand-held Asus MyPal
730w while pictures were taken by using the NikonCoolpix 4500 digital camera
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 6 of 8
Database constructionThe phenotype database was developed using MySQL[43] as a relational database system
DNA extraction and sample poolingFor each M3 family the genomic DNA was extractedfrom four young leaves collected from four differentplants of the same family The leaf samples were col-lected in 96-well plates and the DNA was isolated byusing DNeasy 96 Plant Kit (Quiagen Hilden Ger-many) The quantification of extracted DNA was car-ried out on a 08 agarose gel using l DNA(Invitrogen Carlsbad CA USA) as a concentrationreference Genomic DNA samples were then dilutedtenfold and pooled eightfold to obtain the workingmaterial
PCR amplification mutation detection and validationPCR amplification was based on nested-PCR and wascarried out using two couples of target-specific primers4 ng of pooled genomic DNA was used for the firstPCR and forward-strand primers and reverse-strand pri-mers 5rsquo-end labelled with IRDye 700 and IRDye 800 dye(LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) respectively wereemployed for the second PCR [19]Mutation detection was performed as previously
described [38] Electrophoresis were performed on a LI-COR 4300 (LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) and gel imageswere analysed using Adobe Photoshop software (AdobeSystems Inc San Joseacute CA USA)After discovery mutations were validated by sequence
analysisThe mutation frequency for each amplicon was calcu-
lated as previously described [19] For the average muta-tion frequency we have summed the sizes of allamplicons and we have divided by the total number ofidentified mutants The data were multiplied for 075 inorder to eliminate the missing evaluation due to thepresence of one-fourth wild-type alleles in the 121Mendelian segregation in M3 generation [17]
Additional file 1 Nucleotide alignment Additional data file 1 is afigure showing a comparison analysis of a tilled 240 bp region ofExpansin1 gene This analysis shows that the identified induced pointmutations are not part of natural variabilityClick here for file[ httpwwwbiomedcentralcomcontentsupplementary1756-0500-3-69-S1DOC ]
AbbreviationsBLAST Basic Local Alignment Search Tool CODDLE Codons Optimized toDiscover Deleterious Lesions ctrl control EMS ethylmethane sulfonate LDLethal Dose NCBI National Center for Biotechnology Information RT RoomTemperature SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant TILLING TargetingInduced Local Lesions IN Genomes
AcknowledgementsThis work was mainly funded by the Italian Ministry of University andResearch (MIUR ITALYCO Project DD ndeg 603RIC) and by the Europeanproject EU-SOL (Contract number FOOD-CT-2006-016214) through the 6thframework programmeThis work was also supported by a Marie Curie fellowship The authors thankJJ Giovannoni for providing the Rin gene sequence and Stephan Summerefor reviewing the English The authors wish to thank all colleagues ofMetapontum Agrobios for helping through all phases of the project
Author details1Metapontum Agrobios SS Jonica 106 Km 4482 75010 Metaponto (MT)Italy 2Uniteacute de Recherche en Geacutenomique Veacutegeacutetale UMR INRA-CNRS RueGaston Creacutemieux 91057 Evry Cedex France 3ENEA Casaccia ResearchCenter PO Box 2400 Roma 00100AD Italy
Authorsrsquo contributionsFCa planned and headed the development of the mutant populations APand GS took care and visually phenotyped the mutant populations OD setup the LycoTILL database SM extracted the DNA SM FP and GM didTILLING screens and analysis AB supervised the TILLING platform set up inEvry FCe and FCa co-directed the TILLING project in M Agrobios FCa andSM were responsible for drafting and revising the manuscript withcontributions from co-authorsAll authors read and approved the final manuscript
Competing interestsThe authors declare that they have no competing interests
Received 28 January 2010 Accepted 12 March 2010Published 12 March 2010
References1 Tomato Functional Genomics Database [httptedbticornelledu]2 Fei Z Tang X Alba RM White JA Ronning CM Martin GB Tanksley SD
Giovannoni JJ Comprehensive EST analysis of tomato and comparativegenomics of fruit ripening Plant J 2004 40(1)47-59
3 Chiusano ML DrsquoAgostino N Traini A Licciardiello C Raimondo EAversano M Frusciante L Monti L ISOL an Italian SOLAnaceaegenomics resource BMC Bioinformatics 2007 9(Suppl)S7
4 Moco S Bino RJ Vorst O Verhoeven HA de Groot J van Beek TAVervoort J de Vos CH A liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based metabolome database for tomato Plant Physiol 2006141(4)1205-1218
5 TGRC Tomato Genetic Resourse Center [httptgrcucdavisedu]6 Menda N Semel Y Peled D Eshed Y Zamir D In silico screening of a
saturated mutation library of tomato Plant Journal 2004 38861-8727 Watanabe S Mizoguchi T Aoki K Kubo Y Mori H Imanishi S Yamazaki Y
Shibata D Ezura H Ethylmethansulfonate (EMS) mutagenesis of Solanumlycopersicon cv Micro-Tom for large-scale mutant screens PlantBiotechnololy 2007 2433-38
8 Analysis of the genome sequence of the flowering plant Arabidopsisthaliana Nature 2000 408(6814)796-815
9 The map-based sequence of the rice genome Nature 2005436(7052)793-800
10 Jaillon O Aury JM Noel B Policriti A Clepet C Casagrande A Choisne NAubourg S Vitulo N Jubin C et al The grapevine genome sequencesuggests ancestral hexaploidization in major angiosperm phyla Nature2007 449(7161)463-467
11 International Tomato Genome Sequencing Project [httpwwwsgncornelleduabouttomato_sequencingpl]
12 Mathews H Clendennen SK Caldwell CG Liu XL Connors K Matheis NSchuster DK Menasco DJ Wagoner W Lightner J et al Activation taggingin tomato identifies a transcriptional regulator of anthocyaninbiosynthesis modification and transport Plant Cell 2003 15(8)1689-1703
13 Cooley MB Goldsbrough AP Still DW Yoder JI Site-selected insertionalmutagenesis of tomato with maize Ac and Ds elements Mol Gen Genet1996 252(1-2)184-194
14 McCallum CM Comai L Greene EA Henikoff S Targeting Induced LocalLesions IN Genomes (TILLING) for plant functional genomics PlantPhysiol 2000 123(2)439-442
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 7 of 8
15 Colbert T Till BJ Tompa R Reynolds SH Steine MN Yeung ATMcCallum CM Comai L Henikoff S High-throughput screening forinduced point mutations Plant Physiol 2001 126480-484
16 Till BJ Colbert T Codomo C Enns L Johnson J Reynolds SH Henikoff JGGreene EA Steine MN Comai L et al High-throughput TILLING forArabidopsis Methods Mol Biol 2006 323127-135
17 Greene EA Codomo CA Taylor NE Henikoff JG Till BJ Reynolds SHEnns LC Burtner C Johnson JE Odden AR et al Spectrum of chemicallyinduced mutations from a large-scale reverse-genetic screen inArabidopsis Genetics 2003 164(2)731-740
18 Martin B Ramiro M Martinez-Zapater JM Alonso-Blanco C A high-densitycollection of EMS-induced mutations for TILLING in Landsberg erectagenetic background of Arabidopsis BMC Plant Biol 2009 9147
19 Dalmais M Schmidt J Le Signor C Moussy F Burstin J Savois V Aubert GBrunaud V de Oliveira Y Guichard C et al UTILLdb a Pisum sativum insilico forward and reverse genetics tool Genome Biol 2008 9(2)R43
20 Slade AJ Fuerstenberg SI Loeffler D Steine MN Facciotti D A reversegenetic nontransgenic approach to wheat crop improvement byTILLING Nat Biotechnol 2005 23(1)75-81
21 Till BJ Cooper J Tai TH Colowit P Greene EA Henikoff S Comai LDiscovery of chemically induced mutations in rice by TILLING BMC PlantBiol 2007 719
22 Wu JL Wu C Lei C Baraoidan M Bordeos A Madamba MR Ramos-Pamplona M Mauleon R Portugal A Ulat VJ et al Chemical- andirradiation-induced mutants of indica rice IR64 for forward and reversegenetics Plant Mol Biol 2005 59(1)85-97
23 Caldwell DG McCallum N Shaw P Muehlbauer GJ Marshall DF Waugh RA structured mutant population for forward and reverse genetics inBarley (Hordeum vulgare L) Plant Journal 2004 40143-150
24 Till BJ Reynolds SH Weil C Springer N Burtner C Young K Bowers ECodomo CA Enns LC Odden AR et al Discovery of induced pointmutations in maize genes by TILLING BMC Plant Biol 2004 412
25 Cooper JL Till BJ Laport RG Darlow MC Kleffner JM Jamai A El-Mellouki TLiu S Ritchie R Nielsen N et al TILLING to detect induced mutations insoybean BMC Plant Biol 2008 89
26 Perry JA Wang TL Welham TJ Gardner S Pike JM Yoshida S Parniske MA TILLING reverse genetics tool and a web-accessible collection ofmutants of the legume Lotus japonicus Plant Physiol 2003131(3)866-871
27 Xin Z Wang ML Barkley NA Burow G Franks C Pederson G Burke JApplying genotyping (TILLING) and phenotyping analyses to elucidategene function in a chemically induced sorghum mutant populationBMC Plant Biol 2008 8103
28 Rigola D van Oeveren J Janssen A Bonne A Schneiders H Poel van derHJ van Orsouw NJ Hogers RC de Both MT van Eijk MJ High-throughputdetection of induced mutations and natural variation using KeyPointtechnology PLoS One 2009 4(3)e4761
29 Gady AL Hermans FW Wal Van de MH van Loo EN Visser RG Bachem CWImplementation of two high through-put techniques in a novelapplication detecting point mutations in large EMS mutated plantpopulations Plant Methods 2009 513
30 Moens CB Donn TM Wolf-Saxon ER Ma TP Reverse genetics in zebrafishby TILLING Brief Funct Genomic Proteomic 2008 7(6)454-459
31 Winkler S Schwabedissen A Backasch D Bokel C Seidel C Bonisch SFurthauer M Kuhrs A Cobreros L Brand M et al Target-selected mutantscreen by TILLING in Drosophila Genome Res 2005 15(5)718-723
32 Matilla AJ Ethylene in seed formation and germination Seed ScienceResearch 2000 10111-126
33 Kucera B Cohn MA Leubner-Metzger G Plant hormone interactionsduring seed dormancy release and germination Seed Science Research2005 15281-307
34 LycoTILL Tomato Mutant DB [httpwwwagrobiosittillingindexhtml]35 Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LC Johnson JE
Burtner C Odden AR Young K Taylor NE et al Large-scale discovery ofinduced point mutations with high-throughput TILLING Genome Res2003 13(3)524-530
36 CODDLE Codons Optimized to Discover DeleteriousLEsions [httpwwwproweborgcoddle]
37 Rozen S H S Primer3 on the WWW for general users and for biologistprogrammers Bioinformatics Methods and Protocols Methods in MolecularBiology Totowa NJ Humana PressKrawetz SA Misener S 1999 365-386
38 Triques K Sturbois B Gallais S Dalmais M Chauvin S Clepet C Aubourg SRameau C Caboche M Bendahmane A Characterization of Arabidopsisthaliana mismatch specific endonucleases application to mutationdiscovery by TILLING in pea Plant J 2007 51(6)1116-1125
39 SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant [httpblocksfhcrcorgsiftSIFThtml]
40 Ng PC Henikoff S SIFT Predicting amino acid changes that affectprotein function Nucleic Acids Res 2003 31(13)3812-3814
41 Sega GA A review of the genetic effects of ethyl methanesulfonateMutat Res 1984 134113-142
42 Comai L Young K Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LCJohnson JE Burtner C Odden AR et al Efficient discovery of DNApolymorphisms in natural populations by Ecotilling Plant J 200437(5)778-786
43 MySQL [httpwwwmysqlcom]
doi1011861756-0500-3-69Cite this article as Minoia et al A new mutant genetic resource fortomato crop improvement by TILLING technology BMC Research Notes2010 369
Submit your next manuscript to BioMed Centraland take full advantage of
bull Convenient online submission
bull Thorough peer review
bull No space constraints or color figure charges
bull Immediate publication on acceptance
bull Inclusion in PubMed CAS Scopus and Google Scholar
bull Research which is freely available for redistribution
Submit your manuscript at wwwbiomedcentralcomsubmit
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 8 of 8
ENDO1 enzyme was fundamental in the detection of alltypes of changes that we observed in our mutant popu-lations For its high specificity in recognizing mis-matches at the same rate [38] we could identifymutations never found in other plant species and with ahigher frequencyThe TILLING screening performed on seven tomato
genes permitted the calculation of the mutation densityin the two mutant Red Setter populations We estimatedthe mutation density at 1 mutation322 kb in the 1EMS and 1 mutation574 kb in the 07 EMS Red Set-ter population The mutation densities calculated in the1 and 07 EMS Red Setter populations are 23 and12 times respectively higher than one mutation every737 kb reported by Gady et al[29] in the 1 EMSTPAADASU tomato populationThis comparison demonstrate that our populations have
a higher number of mutations respect to those so far avail-able and published for tomato The high mutation densityof our populations especially for the 1 EMS oneincreases the size of allelic series that can be obtain andreduces the population size that needs to be screenedComparing the mutation densities estimated in the 1
and 07 EMS Red Setter populations with thosedescribed in other plant species results that they are 19and 34 times respectively lower than one mutation per170 kb reported previously for Arabidopsis [17] buttheir average (1448 kb) is similar to those reported formaize (1500 kb) [24] and rice (1500 kb) [22] and 22fold higher than one mutation per Mb found in barleyby Caldwell et al [23]So far higher mutation densities were observed only in
tetraploid wheat (140 kb) and hexaploid wheat (124kb) [20] Itrsquos likely that the polyploidy nature of theirgenomes helps in withstanding the mutagen action andconsequently higher mutation frequencies can beobtainedA mutant population is considered saturated with at
least a single ldquohitrdquo in every gene [6] In the Red SetterTILLING platform more than one mutation was identi-fied per gene analysed We can therefore conclude thatour mutant populations are sufficiently saturatedFurthermore by comparing other plant species used inpublic TILLING projects we can also affirm that ourpopulations are suitable for use in high-throughputmutation discovery
ConclusionsWe have developed a new genetic resource in thetomato Red Setter genetic background by means ofEMS mutagenesis The mutant collection is organized assuch that it could be used for both forward (EMS satu-rated mutant collection and the associated phenotypicdatabase) and reverse (high-throughput TILLING
platform) genetics in tomato for both basic science orcrop improvementThe Red Setter TILLING platform is open to the
scientific community to request TILLING screenings ingenes of interest and to obtain materialThese services can be requested via database that also
serves as portal for user need In addition to our plat-form at present other tomato TILLING platforms arepublicly accessible via web for requesting TILLING ser-vices (httpurgvevryinrafrUTILLdb and httptillingucdaviseduindexphpTomatoTilling) All the availabletomato TILLING platforms including the Red Setterone utilise mutant collections generated in differentgenetic backgrounds and with different EMS doseswhich increase the chance of obtaining a larger spec-trum of alleles Thus it is of interest for the scientificcommunity to have different tomato TILLING resourcesfor the possibility of identifying a greater number ofmutations of interest
MethodsEMS mutagenesisTomato seeds (cv Red Setter) were treated with two dif-ferent concentrations (07 and 1) of the chemicalmutagen EMS (ethylmethane sulfonate) for 18 h at RTwith gentle shaking The seeds were then thoroughlywashed dried and sown in compost in 96 well seedtrays which allowed an accurate determination of germi-nation frequencyControl seeds those not exposed to EMS treatment
were treated in the same manner
Plant materialM2 seeds for the M2 seed production M1 plants weregrown according to standard tomato agronomic practiceand at the end of the fruit-ripening phase M2 seedswere collected from individual M1 plants and keptseparateM3 seeds 3 seeds belonging to each mutant M2 family
were sown in 96 well seed trays and the correspondingseedlings transplanted in open field M3 seeds were col-lected from single M2 plants
M2 plant phenotyping and data collection toolsPhenotype scoring was performed at different develop-mental stages from seed germination through fruit ripen-ing and seed harvest Each mutant candidate wascharacterized according to 17 classes and 51 subclasseswhich are reported in Table 2 The selection of classes andsubclasses was for the most part carried out on the basisof the phenotypic catalog reported by Menda et al [6]Data were collected using a hand-held Asus MyPal
730w while pictures were taken by using the NikonCoolpix 4500 digital camera
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 6 of 8
Database constructionThe phenotype database was developed using MySQL[43] as a relational database system
DNA extraction and sample poolingFor each M3 family the genomic DNA was extractedfrom four young leaves collected from four differentplants of the same family The leaf samples were col-lected in 96-well plates and the DNA was isolated byusing DNeasy 96 Plant Kit (Quiagen Hilden Ger-many) The quantification of extracted DNA was car-ried out on a 08 agarose gel using l DNA(Invitrogen Carlsbad CA USA) as a concentrationreference Genomic DNA samples were then dilutedtenfold and pooled eightfold to obtain the workingmaterial
PCR amplification mutation detection and validationPCR amplification was based on nested-PCR and wascarried out using two couples of target-specific primers4 ng of pooled genomic DNA was used for the firstPCR and forward-strand primers and reverse-strand pri-mers 5rsquo-end labelled with IRDye 700 and IRDye 800 dye(LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) respectively wereemployed for the second PCR [19]Mutation detection was performed as previously
described [38] Electrophoresis were performed on a LI-COR 4300 (LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) and gel imageswere analysed using Adobe Photoshop software (AdobeSystems Inc San Joseacute CA USA)After discovery mutations were validated by sequence
analysisThe mutation frequency for each amplicon was calcu-
lated as previously described [19] For the average muta-tion frequency we have summed the sizes of allamplicons and we have divided by the total number ofidentified mutants The data were multiplied for 075 inorder to eliminate the missing evaluation due to thepresence of one-fourth wild-type alleles in the 121Mendelian segregation in M3 generation [17]
Additional file 1 Nucleotide alignment Additional data file 1 is afigure showing a comparison analysis of a tilled 240 bp region ofExpansin1 gene This analysis shows that the identified induced pointmutations are not part of natural variabilityClick here for file[ httpwwwbiomedcentralcomcontentsupplementary1756-0500-3-69-S1DOC ]
AbbreviationsBLAST Basic Local Alignment Search Tool CODDLE Codons Optimized toDiscover Deleterious Lesions ctrl control EMS ethylmethane sulfonate LDLethal Dose NCBI National Center for Biotechnology Information RT RoomTemperature SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant TILLING TargetingInduced Local Lesions IN Genomes
AcknowledgementsThis work was mainly funded by the Italian Ministry of University andResearch (MIUR ITALYCO Project DD ndeg 603RIC) and by the Europeanproject EU-SOL (Contract number FOOD-CT-2006-016214) through the 6thframework programmeThis work was also supported by a Marie Curie fellowship The authors thankJJ Giovannoni for providing the Rin gene sequence and Stephan Summerefor reviewing the English The authors wish to thank all colleagues ofMetapontum Agrobios for helping through all phases of the project
Author details1Metapontum Agrobios SS Jonica 106 Km 4482 75010 Metaponto (MT)Italy 2Uniteacute de Recherche en Geacutenomique Veacutegeacutetale UMR INRA-CNRS RueGaston Creacutemieux 91057 Evry Cedex France 3ENEA Casaccia ResearchCenter PO Box 2400 Roma 00100AD Italy
Authorsrsquo contributionsFCa planned and headed the development of the mutant populations APand GS took care and visually phenotyped the mutant populations OD setup the LycoTILL database SM extracted the DNA SM FP and GM didTILLING screens and analysis AB supervised the TILLING platform set up inEvry FCe and FCa co-directed the TILLING project in M Agrobios FCa andSM were responsible for drafting and revising the manuscript withcontributions from co-authorsAll authors read and approved the final manuscript
Competing interestsThe authors declare that they have no competing interests
Received 28 January 2010 Accepted 12 March 2010Published 12 March 2010
References1 Tomato Functional Genomics Database [httptedbticornelledu]2 Fei Z Tang X Alba RM White JA Ronning CM Martin GB Tanksley SD
Giovannoni JJ Comprehensive EST analysis of tomato and comparativegenomics of fruit ripening Plant J 2004 40(1)47-59
3 Chiusano ML DrsquoAgostino N Traini A Licciardiello C Raimondo EAversano M Frusciante L Monti L ISOL an Italian SOLAnaceaegenomics resource BMC Bioinformatics 2007 9(Suppl)S7
4 Moco S Bino RJ Vorst O Verhoeven HA de Groot J van Beek TAVervoort J de Vos CH A liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based metabolome database for tomato Plant Physiol 2006141(4)1205-1218
5 TGRC Tomato Genetic Resourse Center [httptgrcucdavisedu]6 Menda N Semel Y Peled D Eshed Y Zamir D In silico screening of a
saturated mutation library of tomato Plant Journal 2004 38861-8727 Watanabe S Mizoguchi T Aoki K Kubo Y Mori H Imanishi S Yamazaki Y
Shibata D Ezura H Ethylmethansulfonate (EMS) mutagenesis of Solanumlycopersicon cv Micro-Tom for large-scale mutant screens PlantBiotechnololy 2007 2433-38
8 Analysis of the genome sequence of the flowering plant Arabidopsisthaliana Nature 2000 408(6814)796-815
9 The map-based sequence of the rice genome Nature 2005436(7052)793-800
10 Jaillon O Aury JM Noel B Policriti A Clepet C Casagrande A Choisne NAubourg S Vitulo N Jubin C et al The grapevine genome sequencesuggests ancestral hexaploidization in major angiosperm phyla Nature2007 449(7161)463-467
11 International Tomato Genome Sequencing Project [httpwwwsgncornelleduabouttomato_sequencingpl]
12 Mathews H Clendennen SK Caldwell CG Liu XL Connors K Matheis NSchuster DK Menasco DJ Wagoner W Lightner J et al Activation taggingin tomato identifies a transcriptional regulator of anthocyaninbiosynthesis modification and transport Plant Cell 2003 15(8)1689-1703
13 Cooley MB Goldsbrough AP Still DW Yoder JI Site-selected insertionalmutagenesis of tomato with maize Ac and Ds elements Mol Gen Genet1996 252(1-2)184-194
14 McCallum CM Comai L Greene EA Henikoff S Targeting Induced LocalLesions IN Genomes (TILLING) for plant functional genomics PlantPhysiol 2000 123(2)439-442
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 7 of 8
15 Colbert T Till BJ Tompa R Reynolds SH Steine MN Yeung ATMcCallum CM Comai L Henikoff S High-throughput screening forinduced point mutations Plant Physiol 2001 126480-484
16 Till BJ Colbert T Codomo C Enns L Johnson J Reynolds SH Henikoff JGGreene EA Steine MN Comai L et al High-throughput TILLING forArabidopsis Methods Mol Biol 2006 323127-135
17 Greene EA Codomo CA Taylor NE Henikoff JG Till BJ Reynolds SHEnns LC Burtner C Johnson JE Odden AR et al Spectrum of chemicallyinduced mutations from a large-scale reverse-genetic screen inArabidopsis Genetics 2003 164(2)731-740
18 Martin B Ramiro M Martinez-Zapater JM Alonso-Blanco C A high-densitycollection of EMS-induced mutations for TILLING in Landsberg erectagenetic background of Arabidopsis BMC Plant Biol 2009 9147
19 Dalmais M Schmidt J Le Signor C Moussy F Burstin J Savois V Aubert GBrunaud V de Oliveira Y Guichard C et al UTILLdb a Pisum sativum insilico forward and reverse genetics tool Genome Biol 2008 9(2)R43
20 Slade AJ Fuerstenberg SI Loeffler D Steine MN Facciotti D A reversegenetic nontransgenic approach to wheat crop improvement byTILLING Nat Biotechnol 2005 23(1)75-81
21 Till BJ Cooper J Tai TH Colowit P Greene EA Henikoff S Comai LDiscovery of chemically induced mutations in rice by TILLING BMC PlantBiol 2007 719
22 Wu JL Wu C Lei C Baraoidan M Bordeos A Madamba MR Ramos-Pamplona M Mauleon R Portugal A Ulat VJ et al Chemical- andirradiation-induced mutants of indica rice IR64 for forward and reversegenetics Plant Mol Biol 2005 59(1)85-97
23 Caldwell DG McCallum N Shaw P Muehlbauer GJ Marshall DF Waugh RA structured mutant population for forward and reverse genetics inBarley (Hordeum vulgare L) Plant Journal 2004 40143-150
24 Till BJ Reynolds SH Weil C Springer N Burtner C Young K Bowers ECodomo CA Enns LC Odden AR et al Discovery of induced pointmutations in maize genes by TILLING BMC Plant Biol 2004 412
25 Cooper JL Till BJ Laport RG Darlow MC Kleffner JM Jamai A El-Mellouki TLiu S Ritchie R Nielsen N et al TILLING to detect induced mutations insoybean BMC Plant Biol 2008 89
26 Perry JA Wang TL Welham TJ Gardner S Pike JM Yoshida S Parniske MA TILLING reverse genetics tool and a web-accessible collection ofmutants of the legume Lotus japonicus Plant Physiol 2003131(3)866-871
27 Xin Z Wang ML Barkley NA Burow G Franks C Pederson G Burke JApplying genotyping (TILLING) and phenotyping analyses to elucidategene function in a chemically induced sorghum mutant populationBMC Plant Biol 2008 8103
28 Rigola D van Oeveren J Janssen A Bonne A Schneiders H Poel van derHJ van Orsouw NJ Hogers RC de Both MT van Eijk MJ High-throughputdetection of induced mutations and natural variation using KeyPointtechnology PLoS One 2009 4(3)e4761
29 Gady AL Hermans FW Wal Van de MH van Loo EN Visser RG Bachem CWImplementation of two high through-put techniques in a novelapplication detecting point mutations in large EMS mutated plantpopulations Plant Methods 2009 513
30 Moens CB Donn TM Wolf-Saxon ER Ma TP Reverse genetics in zebrafishby TILLING Brief Funct Genomic Proteomic 2008 7(6)454-459
31 Winkler S Schwabedissen A Backasch D Bokel C Seidel C Bonisch SFurthauer M Kuhrs A Cobreros L Brand M et al Target-selected mutantscreen by TILLING in Drosophila Genome Res 2005 15(5)718-723
32 Matilla AJ Ethylene in seed formation and germination Seed ScienceResearch 2000 10111-126
33 Kucera B Cohn MA Leubner-Metzger G Plant hormone interactionsduring seed dormancy release and germination Seed Science Research2005 15281-307
34 LycoTILL Tomato Mutant DB [httpwwwagrobiosittillingindexhtml]35 Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LC Johnson JE
Burtner C Odden AR Young K Taylor NE et al Large-scale discovery ofinduced point mutations with high-throughput TILLING Genome Res2003 13(3)524-530
36 CODDLE Codons Optimized to Discover DeleteriousLEsions [httpwwwproweborgcoddle]
37 Rozen S H S Primer3 on the WWW for general users and for biologistprogrammers Bioinformatics Methods and Protocols Methods in MolecularBiology Totowa NJ Humana PressKrawetz SA Misener S 1999 365-386
38 Triques K Sturbois B Gallais S Dalmais M Chauvin S Clepet C Aubourg SRameau C Caboche M Bendahmane A Characterization of Arabidopsisthaliana mismatch specific endonucleases application to mutationdiscovery by TILLING in pea Plant J 2007 51(6)1116-1125
39 SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant [httpblocksfhcrcorgsiftSIFThtml]
40 Ng PC Henikoff S SIFT Predicting amino acid changes that affectprotein function Nucleic Acids Res 2003 31(13)3812-3814
41 Sega GA A review of the genetic effects of ethyl methanesulfonateMutat Res 1984 134113-142
42 Comai L Young K Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LCJohnson JE Burtner C Odden AR et al Efficient discovery of DNApolymorphisms in natural populations by Ecotilling Plant J 200437(5)778-786
43 MySQL [httpwwwmysqlcom]
doi1011861756-0500-3-69Cite this article as Minoia et al A new mutant genetic resource fortomato crop improvement by TILLING technology BMC Research Notes2010 369
Submit your next manuscript to BioMed Centraland take full advantage of
bull Convenient online submission
bull Thorough peer review
bull No space constraints or color figure charges
bull Immediate publication on acceptance
bull Inclusion in PubMed CAS Scopus and Google Scholar
bull Research which is freely available for redistribution
Submit your manuscript at wwwbiomedcentralcomsubmit
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 8 of 8
Database constructionThe phenotype database was developed using MySQL[43] as a relational database system
DNA extraction and sample poolingFor each M3 family the genomic DNA was extractedfrom four young leaves collected from four differentplants of the same family The leaf samples were col-lected in 96-well plates and the DNA was isolated byusing DNeasy 96 Plant Kit (Quiagen Hilden Ger-many) The quantification of extracted DNA was car-ried out on a 08 agarose gel using l DNA(Invitrogen Carlsbad CA USA) as a concentrationreference Genomic DNA samples were then dilutedtenfold and pooled eightfold to obtain the workingmaterial
PCR amplification mutation detection and validationPCR amplification was based on nested-PCR and wascarried out using two couples of target-specific primers4 ng of pooled genomic DNA was used for the firstPCR and forward-strand primers and reverse-strand pri-mers 5rsquo-end labelled with IRDye 700 and IRDye 800 dye(LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) respectively wereemployed for the second PCR [19]Mutation detection was performed as previously
described [38] Electrophoresis were performed on a LI-COR 4300 (LI-CORreg Lincoln NE USA) and gel imageswere analysed using Adobe Photoshop software (AdobeSystems Inc San Joseacute CA USA)After discovery mutations were validated by sequence
analysisThe mutation frequency for each amplicon was calcu-
lated as previously described [19] For the average muta-tion frequency we have summed the sizes of allamplicons and we have divided by the total number ofidentified mutants The data were multiplied for 075 inorder to eliminate the missing evaluation due to thepresence of one-fourth wild-type alleles in the 121Mendelian segregation in M3 generation [17]
Additional file 1 Nucleotide alignment Additional data file 1 is afigure showing a comparison analysis of a tilled 240 bp region ofExpansin1 gene This analysis shows that the identified induced pointmutations are not part of natural variabilityClick here for file[ httpwwwbiomedcentralcomcontentsupplementary1756-0500-3-69-S1DOC ]
AbbreviationsBLAST Basic Local Alignment Search Tool CODDLE Codons Optimized toDiscover Deleterious Lesions ctrl control EMS ethylmethane sulfonate LDLethal Dose NCBI National Center for Biotechnology Information RT RoomTemperature SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant TILLING TargetingInduced Local Lesions IN Genomes
AcknowledgementsThis work was mainly funded by the Italian Ministry of University andResearch (MIUR ITALYCO Project DD ndeg 603RIC) and by the Europeanproject EU-SOL (Contract number FOOD-CT-2006-016214) through the 6thframework programmeThis work was also supported by a Marie Curie fellowship The authors thankJJ Giovannoni for providing the Rin gene sequence and Stephan Summerefor reviewing the English The authors wish to thank all colleagues ofMetapontum Agrobios for helping through all phases of the project
Author details1Metapontum Agrobios SS Jonica 106 Km 4482 75010 Metaponto (MT)Italy 2Uniteacute de Recherche en Geacutenomique Veacutegeacutetale UMR INRA-CNRS RueGaston Creacutemieux 91057 Evry Cedex France 3ENEA Casaccia ResearchCenter PO Box 2400 Roma 00100AD Italy
Authorsrsquo contributionsFCa planned and headed the development of the mutant populations APand GS took care and visually phenotyped the mutant populations OD setup the LycoTILL database SM extracted the DNA SM FP and GM didTILLING screens and analysis AB supervised the TILLING platform set up inEvry FCe and FCa co-directed the TILLING project in M Agrobios FCa andSM were responsible for drafting and revising the manuscript withcontributions from co-authorsAll authors read and approved the final manuscript
Competing interestsThe authors declare that they have no competing interests
Received 28 January 2010 Accepted 12 March 2010Published 12 March 2010
References1 Tomato Functional Genomics Database [httptedbticornelledu]2 Fei Z Tang X Alba RM White JA Ronning CM Martin GB Tanksley SD
Giovannoni JJ Comprehensive EST analysis of tomato and comparativegenomics of fruit ripening Plant J 2004 40(1)47-59
3 Chiusano ML DrsquoAgostino N Traini A Licciardiello C Raimondo EAversano M Frusciante L Monti L ISOL an Italian SOLAnaceaegenomics resource BMC Bioinformatics 2007 9(Suppl)S7
4 Moco S Bino RJ Vorst O Verhoeven HA de Groot J van Beek TAVervoort J de Vos CH A liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based metabolome database for tomato Plant Physiol 2006141(4)1205-1218
5 TGRC Tomato Genetic Resourse Center [httptgrcucdavisedu]6 Menda N Semel Y Peled D Eshed Y Zamir D In silico screening of a
saturated mutation library of tomato Plant Journal 2004 38861-8727 Watanabe S Mizoguchi T Aoki K Kubo Y Mori H Imanishi S Yamazaki Y
Shibata D Ezura H Ethylmethansulfonate (EMS) mutagenesis of Solanumlycopersicon cv Micro-Tom for large-scale mutant screens PlantBiotechnololy 2007 2433-38
8 Analysis of the genome sequence of the flowering plant Arabidopsisthaliana Nature 2000 408(6814)796-815
9 The map-based sequence of the rice genome Nature 2005436(7052)793-800
10 Jaillon O Aury JM Noel B Policriti A Clepet C Casagrande A Choisne NAubourg S Vitulo N Jubin C et al The grapevine genome sequencesuggests ancestral hexaploidization in major angiosperm phyla Nature2007 449(7161)463-467
11 International Tomato Genome Sequencing Project [httpwwwsgncornelleduabouttomato_sequencingpl]
12 Mathews H Clendennen SK Caldwell CG Liu XL Connors K Matheis NSchuster DK Menasco DJ Wagoner W Lightner J et al Activation taggingin tomato identifies a transcriptional regulator of anthocyaninbiosynthesis modification and transport Plant Cell 2003 15(8)1689-1703
13 Cooley MB Goldsbrough AP Still DW Yoder JI Site-selected insertionalmutagenesis of tomato with maize Ac and Ds elements Mol Gen Genet1996 252(1-2)184-194
14 McCallum CM Comai L Greene EA Henikoff S Targeting Induced LocalLesions IN Genomes (TILLING) for plant functional genomics PlantPhysiol 2000 123(2)439-442
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 7 of 8
15 Colbert T Till BJ Tompa R Reynolds SH Steine MN Yeung ATMcCallum CM Comai L Henikoff S High-throughput screening forinduced point mutations Plant Physiol 2001 126480-484
16 Till BJ Colbert T Codomo C Enns L Johnson J Reynolds SH Henikoff JGGreene EA Steine MN Comai L et al High-throughput TILLING forArabidopsis Methods Mol Biol 2006 323127-135
17 Greene EA Codomo CA Taylor NE Henikoff JG Till BJ Reynolds SHEnns LC Burtner C Johnson JE Odden AR et al Spectrum of chemicallyinduced mutations from a large-scale reverse-genetic screen inArabidopsis Genetics 2003 164(2)731-740
18 Martin B Ramiro M Martinez-Zapater JM Alonso-Blanco C A high-densitycollection of EMS-induced mutations for TILLING in Landsberg erectagenetic background of Arabidopsis BMC Plant Biol 2009 9147
19 Dalmais M Schmidt J Le Signor C Moussy F Burstin J Savois V Aubert GBrunaud V de Oliveira Y Guichard C et al UTILLdb a Pisum sativum insilico forward and reverse genetics tool Genome Biol 2008 9(2)R43
20 Slade AJ Fuerstenberg SI Loeffler D Steine MN Facciotti D A reversegenetic nontransgenic approach to wheat crop improvement byTILLING Nat Biotechnol 2005 23(1)75-81
21 Till BJ Cooper J Tai TH Colowit P Greene EA Henikoff S Comai LDiscovery of chemically induced mutations in rice by TILLING BMC PlantBiol 2007 719
22 Wu JL Wu C Lei C Baraoidan M Bordeos A Madamba MR Ramos-Pamplona M Mauleon R Portugal A Ulat VJ et al Chemical- andirradiation-induced mutants of indica rice IR64 for forward and reversegenetics Plant Mol Biol 2005 59(1)85-97
23 Caldwell DG McCallum N Shaw P Muehlbauer GJ Marshall DF Waugh RA structured mutant population for forward and reverse genetics inBarley (Hordeum vulgare L) Plant Journal 2004 40143-150
24 Till BJ Reynolds SH Weil C Springer N Burtner C Young K Bowers ECodomo CA Enns LC Odden AR et al Discovery of induced pointmutations in maize genes by TILLING BMC Plant Biol 2004 412
25 Cooper JL Till BJ Laport RG Darlow MC Kleffner JM Jamai A El-Mellouki TLiu S Ritchie R Nielsen N et al TILLING to detect induced mutations insoybean BMC Plant Biol 2008 89
26 Perry JA Wang TL Welham TJ Gardner S Pike JM Yoshida S Parniske MA TILLING reverse genetics tool and a web-accessible collection ofmutants of the legume Lotus japonicus Plant Physiol 2003131(3)866-871
27 Xin Z Wang ML Barkley NA Burow G Franks C Pederson G Burke JApplying genotyping (TILLING) and phenotyping analyses to elucidategene function in a chemically induced sorghum mutant populationBMC Plant Biol 2008 8103
28 Rigola D van Oeveren J Janssen A Bonne A Schneiders H Poel van derHJ van Orsouw NJ Hogers RC de Both MT van Eijk MJ High-throughputdetection of induced mutations and natural variation using KeyPointtechnology PLoS One 2009 4(3)e4761
29 Gady AL Hermans FW Wal Van de MH van Loo EN Visser RG Bachem CWImplementation of two high through-put techniques in a novelapplication detecting point mutations in large EMS mutated plantpopulations Plant Methods 2009 513
30 Moens CB Donn TM Wolf-Saxon ER Ma TP Reverse genetics in zebrafishby TILLING Brief Funct Genomic Proteomic 2008 7(6)454-459
31 Winkler S Schwabedissen A Backasch D Bokel C Seidel C Bonisch SFurthauer M Kuhrs A Cobreros L Brand M et al Target-selected mutantscreen by TILLING in Drosophila Genome Res 2005 15(5)718-723
32 Matilla AJ Ethylene in seed formation and germination Seed ScienceResearch 2000 10111-126
33 Kucera B Cohn MA Leubner-Metzger G Plant hormone interactionsduring seed dormancy release and germination Seed Science Research2005 15281-307
34 LycoTILL Tomato Mutant DB [httpwwwagrobiosittillingindexhtml]35 Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LC Johnson JE
Burtner C Odden AR Young K Taylor NE et al Large-scale discovery ofinduced point mutations with high-throughput TILLING Genome Res2003 13(3)524-530
36 CODDLE Codons Optimized to Discover DeleteriousLEsions [httpwwwproweborgcoddle]
37 Rozen S H S Primer3 on the WWW for general users and for biologistprogrammers Bioinformatics Methods and Protocols Methods in MolecularBiology Totowa NJ Humana PressKrawetz SA Misener S 1999 365-386
38 Triques K Sturbois B Gallais S Dalmais M Chauvin S Clepet C Aubourg SRameau C Caboche M Bendahmane A Characterization of Arabidopsisthaliana mismatch specific endonucleases application to mutationdiscovery by TILLING in pea Plant J 2007 51(6)1116-1125
39 SIFT Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant [httpblocksfhcrcorgsiftSIFThtml]
40 Ng PC Henikoff S SIFT Predicting amino acid changes that affectprotein function Nucleic Acids Res 2003 31(13)3812-3814
41 Sega GA A review of the genetic effects of ethyl methanesulfonateMutat Res 1984 134113-142
42 Comai L Young K Till BJ Reynolds SH Greene EA Codomo CA Enns LCJohnson JE Burtner C Odden AR et al Efficient discovery of DNApolymorphisms in natural populations by Ecotilling Plant J 200437(5)778-786
43 MySQL [httpwwwmysqlcom]
doi1011861756-0500-3-69Cite this article as Minoia et al A new mutant genetic resource fortomato crop improvement by TILLING technology BMC Research Notes2010 369
Submit your next manuscript to BioMed Centraland take full advantage of
bull Convenient online submission
bull Thorough peer review
bull No space constraints or color figure charges
bull Immediate publication on acceptance
bull Inclusion in PubMed CAS Scopus and Google Scholar
bull Research which is freely available for redistribution
Submit your manuscript at wwwbiomedcentralcomsubmit
Minoia et al BMC Research Notes 2010 369httpwwwbiomedcentralcom1756-0500369
Page 8 of 8
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doi1011861756-0500-3-69Cite this article as Minoia et al A new mutant genetic resource fortomato crop improvement by TILLING technology BMC Research Notes2010 369
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